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LAW AND CATASTROPHE

The Amherst Series in Law, Jurisprudence, and Social Thought EDITED BY

Austin Sarat, Lawrence Douglas, and Martha Merrill Umphrey

Law and Catastrophe

Edited by AUSTIN SARAT LAWRENCE DOUGLAS MARTHA MERRILL UMPHREY

STANFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS

Stanford, California, 2007

Stanford University Press Stanford, California © 2007 by the Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University All rights reserved

No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system without the prior written permission of Stanford University Press. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Law and catastrophe I edited by Austin Sarat, Lawrence Douglas, Martha Merrill Umphrey. p. cm.-(The Amherst series in law, jurisprudence, and social thought) Includes index. ISBN 978-o-8047-5683-9 (cloth: alk. paper) 1. Disasters-Law and legislation. 2. Disaster relief-Law and legislation. 3. Industrial accidents-Law and legislation. 4. Social responsibility of business. 5· Disasters. I. Sarat, Austin. II. Douglas, Lawrence. Ill. Umphrey, Martha Merrill. K1980.L39 2007 344.05'34-dc22 2007005949

Typeset by Newgen-Austin in 10/14.5 Minion

To my son Ben (A.S.)

Acknowledgments

The essays in this book were originally prepared for and presented as a seminar series at Amherst College during the 2003-2004 academic year. We are grateful to our Amherst College colleagues David Delaney and Nasser Hussain for their enthusiastic and helpful participation in that series. We thank our students in Amherst College's Department of Law, Jurisprudence, and Social Thought for their interest in the issues addressed in this book. Finally, we would like to express our appreciation for generous financial support provided by the College's Charles Hamilton Houston Forum on Law and Social Change.

Contents

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS CONTRIBUTORS

vii XI

A Jurisprudence of Catastrophe: An Introduction LAWRENCE DOUGLAS, AUSTIN SARAT, MARTHA MERRILL UMPHREY

Catastrophe: Plowing Up the Ground of Reason LINDA ROSS

19

MEYER

Catastrophes and Humanitarian Corporate Responsibility: A Conceptual Critique

33

RONEN SHAMIR

Political Catastrophe and Liberal Legal Desire: Two Stories of Revolution, Remediation, and Return from the French Nineteenth Century SYLVIA SCHAFER

Committed to Memory: Rebecca West's Nuremberg RAVIT

Mandating the National Memory of Catastrophe JAMES E.

INDEX

91

PE'ER-LAMO REICHMAN

131

YOUNG

159

Contributors

LAw R E N c E D o u G LA s is Professor of Law, Jurisprudence, and Social Thought at Amherst College. L I N D A R o s s M E YE R is Professor of Law at Quinnipiac Law School. RA V I T P E ' E R - LA M0 Brown University.

RE I C H MAN is Assistant Professor of English at

AusTIN sA RAT is the William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Jurisprudence and Political Science and Professor of Law, Jurisprudence, and Social Thought at Amherst College and Five College Fortieth Anniversary Professor. s YLv I A s c HA F E R is Professor of History at the University of Connecticut. R oNE N sHAM I R is Professor of Sociology at Tel-Aviv University. MART HA MER RILL U MP HR E Y is Associate Professor of Law, Jurisprudence, and Social Thought at Amherst College. JAM E s E. YouNG is Professor of English as well as Judaic and Near Eastern Studies at the University of Massachusetts.

LAW AND CATASTROPHE

A Jurisprudence of Catastrophe: An Introduction LAWRENCE DOUGLAS AUSTIN SARAT MARTHA MERRILL UMPHREY

The Idea of Catastrophe The study of catastrophe is a growth industry. Today, cosmologists scan the heavens for asteroids of the kind that smashed into Earth some 90 million years ago, leading to the swift global die-off of the dinosaurs. Climatologists create elaborate models of the chaotic weather and vast flooding that will result from the continued buildup of greenhouse gases in the planet's atmosphere. 1 Epidemiologists plan for the next pandemic of the proportions of the Spanish flu, which traversed the world in the waning days of the Great War and left a trail of 20 million dead. 2 Physicists ponder the chances that experiments with subatomic particles might lead to a "strangelet event": the sudden collapse of the planet into a hyperdense sphere the diameter of a football field. 3 Meanwhile, terrorist experts and homeland security consultants struggle to prepare for a wide range of possible biological, chemical, and radiological attacks: aerated smallpox virus spread by a crop duster, botulism dumped into an urban reservoir, a dirty bomb detonated in a city center. 4 These events share the quality of being merely possible, but recent headlines supply more than sufficient examples of real-world catastrophes: Think of the ongoing humanitarian tragedy unfolding in the Darfur region of Sudan, the mass death that resulted from the tsunami of Banda Aceh, or the devastation visited on New Orleans by Hurricane Katrina. But if catastrophes run from the actual and the inevitable to the speculative and the highly improbable, what features do these events share such that they all can be denoted by the same term? Our brief parade of examples suggests that the term does not strictly limit itself to either natural occurrences or events caused by humans; it encompasses both. Nor does the word suggest a specific temporal dimension: Catastrophes may be sudden, caused by the strike of a storm or a terrorist, or slowly unfolding, the result of global warming or

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a politics of racial exclusion culminating in genocide. And the term is more than simply a synonym for disaster: Catastrophe denotes something qualitatively more serious; we might agree that all catastrophes are disasters, but not all disasters are catastrophes. Catastrophe, then, is a limit term-it names a condition at the frontier and endpoint of all forms of fiasco and calamity. In the original Greek, the term catastrophe denotes total "ruin" or a radical "overturning." Yet an overturning of what? As our examples suggest, we reserve eatastrophe to describe events that bring about a substantial, if not mass, loss oflife. Such events usually also include widespread destruction of infrastructure, collapse of public services, and massive disruptions of quotidian routine and existence. As radical disruptions of conventional processes and routines oflife, catastrophes can be understood as overturning the very concept of order itself. Yet even this can be taken one step further, for by upsetting, if not utterly destroying, the predicates of ordered existence, catastrophe can also be understood as overturning the very belief in normative order- the idea that life should and can be patterned according to a system of rules. It is this quality-the erosion of a belief in normative order-that most strikingly characterizes the response of writers and thinkers to earlier catastrophes. In the wake of the earthquake that devastated Lisbon on All Saints' Day in 1755, an event which by all accounts traumatized the Enlightenment imagination, Voltaire penned these famous lines: Will you say: "This is the result of eternal laws Directing the acts of a free and good God!" ... Did Lisbon, which is no more, have more vices Than London and Paris immersed in their pleasures? Lisbon is destroyed, and they dance in Paris! 5

Move forward to the paradigmatic catastrophe of the twentieth century-the Nazi's destruction of the European Jews, denoted in Hebrew simply as the Shoah, "the Catastrophe" 6-and we find a similar crisis of faith. In his haunting memoir Night, Elie Wiesel describes how Nazi policies destroyed both human beings and the possibility of a belief in God: "Never shall I forget those moments which murdered my God." 7 In If This Is a Man, Primo Levi echoes Wiesel's words in his remarkable description of the outrage he feels toward an inmate who, in earshot of those "selected" to be gassed, openly praises God for sparing his life: "If I was God, I would spit at Kuhn's prayer." 8

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3

Bringing the Law In Framed in these terms, what would it mean to speak of a jurisprudence of catastrophe? If the question sounds unfamiliar, it is for the simple reason that little work has been done theorizing the relationship between law and catastrophe. The relationship between law and other limit conditions-such as states of emergencyhas been the subject of a rich and growing literature. 9 By contrast, little has been written about law and catastrophe, and in devoting a volume to the subject, our hope is less to provide an overview of a well-defined field than to sketch the contours of a relatively fresh, yet crucial, terrain of inquiry. As a preliminary matter, we might think of the relationship between law and catastrophe in two completely different ways. In the first, catastrophe could be considered as issuing from law. If modern secular thought sees catastrophe as an

overturning of normative order, traditional religious thought often viewed catastrophe as an expression of normativity. In this understanding, catastrophe was seen as an instrument of law, as a tool of justice, a form of divine sanction for the violation of God's law. 10 In biblical stories such as Noah's Ark and the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, catastrophe is viewed in precisely this manner. In the Prophets, we read: For three crimes of Damascus, and for four, I have decided irrevocably! ... I will send a fire into the house ofHazael .. .U

Far from a random event, catastrophe is God's tool for punishing the human cornm unity in a manner that is lawful, meaningful, and even just. Of course, this is the view attacked by Voltaire when he writes, Will you say: "This is the result of eternal

law I directing the acts of a free and good God!" But notwithstanding the secular humanist critique, we continue to hear echoes of the divine understanding in pronouncements of contemporary religious fundamentalists of all stripes. 12 At the other pole from the divine view is the liberal account. In this genealogy, law issues from catastrophe, not vice versa. In its most influential iteration, in Hobbes's Leviathan, the liberal account describes a state of catastrophic disorder from which all prudent reasoning persons seek to flee. 13 Here, however, we need to justify the designation of the state of nature as a state of catastrophe. By our own reckoning, catastrophe is an overturning of a preexisting order. The state of nature, by contrast, appears to preexist order, and thus it cannot be said to overturn

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DOUGLAS, SARAT, AND UMPHREY

anything. Yet this challenge overlooks a key aspect of Hobbes's argument. Recall that, for Hobbes, the state of nature does not refer to a historical condition; in this regard, he parts company with Locke, who believed that all societies evolved out of such a state. For Hobbes, the state of nature is an analytic condition: It is the state that societies always threaten to revert back to, given the right set of conditions. Seen in this light, law is constituted in the effort to escape catastrophe; indeed, law is what makes possible the defeat of catastrophic disorder and violence. In this reckoning catastrophe is both juris generative 14-it is the ever-present threat of chaos that creates the need for law-and the very antithesis or negation oflaw-it is the uncontrollable force that threatens to extirpate law's ordering effects on social life. Once law has been established to maintain social order, catastrophe remains law's nemesis, the unruly force that would overturn the rules and regimes so carefully constructed by the principles and practices of legality. In this picture, the specter of catastrophe plays a crucial role in law's justificatory logic, as law appears as the bulwark between civilization and catastrophic disorder. Both of these understandings-the divine and the liberal-appear in Linda Ross Meyer's contribution to our collection, "Catastrophe: Plowing Up the Ground of Reason." Meyer explores how modern law strives to gain dominion over catastrophe; how it attempts to subdue, domesticate, and colonize it. Specifically, Meyer shows how law works to master catastrophe through its standard responses to disorder-through strategies of anticipation, prevention, and amelioration. Yet as Meyer points out in her close reading of the Book of Job, this was not always the case. Historically, catastrophe was conceptualized not simply as refractory to secular law's regulatory techniques but as definitionally beyond law's regulatory domain. Enfolded within the category of "acts of God"-disasters born of an opaque and inaccessible divine logic-catastrophes were viewed as "unforeseeable" events for which, say, an insurer could not be held legally liable. Rather, they were seen as beyond secular law's jurisdiction. As Meyer makes clear, over time this understanding changed. With the ascendancy ofliberal jurisprudence, law came to expand its jurisdictional ambit: Catastrophe was no longer seen as beyond the law's power of control but as a challenge to it-a challenge that demanded a legal response. According to Meyer, this jurisdictional shift left neither law nor catastrophe intact. In The Faces ofInjustice, Judith Shklar observed that the distinction between misfortune and injustice is not natural, inevitable, or stable. 15 Shklar insisted that the traditional idea-that misfortunes refer to accidents beyond human calculation and control, whereas injustices refer to harms that result from negligent,

A JURISPRUDENCE OF CATASTROPHE

5

reckless, or intentionally wrongful human actions-is no longer sustainable in a liberal legal community. In our legal universe, the failure to ameliorate the suffering of others may transform what first seemed a "misfortune" into an "injustice." Meyer's chapter powerfully echoes and expands upon Shklar's argument. Indeed, as several of our contributors make clear, one of the distinguishing features of catastrophe is its urgent call for response. Commonplace misfortunes can be ignored easily enough. The state can figuratively step over the body of the homeless without triggering a crisis oflegitimacy. Catastrophe, by contrast, tolerates no such absence of response. Within the liberal state, catastrophe demands action, and the failure to act will be seen as a crucial element of catastrophe itself. In the case of Hurricane Katrina, it was the government's failure to respond, more than the storm surge itself, that was decried as catastrophic. 16 The chaos, desperation, and lawlessness that engulfed New Orleans came to be seen as only indirectly a consequence of the hurricane and flood; they were the direct result of the government's failure to mobilize an effective response. Many critics of the government's response went further still, locating the crucial failure not in the woefully bungled relief efforts but in the failure to prevent the catastrophe from occurring in the first place. Had the government invested in the construction of a more durable levee system-and it was probable, if not certain, that New Orleans would one day be pummeled by a category-four hurricane 17- then the flood damage might have been completely averted. Indeed, such arguments echo Rousseau's famous reaction to Voltaire's response to the Lisbon earthquake of 1755. Far from seeing the catastrophe as evidence of a disordered and meaningless universe, Rousseau understood the event in terms of human failure:" ... it was hardly nature who assembled there twenty-thousand houses of six or seven stories. If the residents of this large city had been more evenly dispersed and less densely housed, the losses would have been fewer or perhaps none at all." 18 In Rousseau's argument, we hear the position that Meyer describes as the colonizing impulse of the law-the desire to wrestle catastrophe from the realm of "acts of God" and to place it under the regulatory auspices of secular law. Thus, as we begin to theorize the relationship between law and catastrophe, Meyer's contribution frames two additional insights. First, pace Shklar, the distinction between catastrophes caused by nature and those orchestrated by humans is neither clear nor stable. Second, it is in the nature of catastrophe that any post hoc response will tend to be viewed as insufficient and belated. In terms of the triumvirate of ordering strategies available to the law, catastrophe demands that law be geared to

6

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anticipation and prevention rather than amelioration. When the law finds itself in the position of mobilizing ameliorative actions, it has already failed in important respects to master the challenge of catastrophe.

Anticipation and Prevention Regulation can be understood as the "act or process of controlling by rule or restriction." 19 In our contemporary legal universe, the concept of regulatory law specifically refers to orders or rules enforced by administrative agencies. These agencies are often responsible for articulating and enforcing rules that attempt to anticipate and prevent catastrophes. 20 The Securities and Exchange Commission, for example, establishes, interprets, and enforces rules designed to prevent a catastrophic collapse of the stock market. The Transportation Security Administration is responsible for regulating passenger and freight transportation in the United States in a manner that will safeguard against catastrophic accidents and attacks. Although most regulatory agencies tend to focus on anticipation and prevention, this is not always the case. As an administration specifically geared to disaster relief and assistance, the Federal Emergency Management Agency stands as the prime example of a regulatory administration with a focus on amelioration. Yet regulatory agencies and administrations alone do not occupy the field of law's response to catastrophe. Viewed conceptually, it is helpful to distinguish between regulatory strategies (and by this we do not mean to limit our discussion to the world of administrative law) that involve criminal law and those that rely on civil law. Criminal law's response has been preoccupied with two kinds of catastrophic threats: those posed by states and those posed by terrorist groups. Under the former, we think of trials of perpetrators of state-sponsored atrocities such as genocide and crimes against humanity. Yet, as we'll see when we examine the concluding contributions to our volume, it is often difficult to say whether such actions are, at their core, preventive or ameliorative. In the case of terrorist threats, the law's response has clearly been aimed at anticipation and prevention, though this itself has emerged as a subject of intense controversy. Indeed, the most pressing constitutional issues of the day now involve questions such as the following: Does the executive branch enjoy inherent powers to order wiretaps of alleged terrorist suspects in the absence of congressional authorization or judicial warrants? Does the executive have inherent powers to authorize the use of "unorthodox" interrogation techniques for terrorist suspects? 21 Should terrorist suspects be

A JURISPRUDENCE OF CATASTROPHE

7

entitled to the full panoply of rights and procedures that come with trials before Article Ill courts? 22 And how can we characterize the powers claimed by the executive branch? Are they either legal or illegal, or is it important to use another characterization altogether such as "extralegal"? 23 These controversies raise the larger question of how we should go about striking the proper balance between civil liberties and collective security in an age of terrorism. However we might think about these matters, we must recall that it is not terrorism per se that creates the need for a recalibration of what might be considered law's most critical balance. After all, anarchist groups were widespread at the turn of the twentieth century, and the terror they spawned was considered of epidemic levels. 24 New, then, is not the existence of terrorism but the nature of the threat that it poses. As Michael Ignatieff's The Lesser Evil 25 and Richard Posner's Catas-

trophe: Risk and Response 26 make clear, what distinguishes today's terrorists is their power to inflict catastrophic damage, which was the lesson learned on 9/11. It is this fact-the specter of catastrophe-that has changed the terms of the debate for those on the left and the right. At the most basic level, the need to anticipate and prevent terrorist-sponsored catastrophes has raised foundational questions about the substance and procedures of criminal law. Predictably enough, the answers to these questions often fall back on classic Hobbesian arguments: that in the face of catastrophic violence, the interests of security trump all. And yet this logic is peculiarly self-defeating: The law's draconian efforts to anticipate and prevent catastrophic terrorism threaten to erode law's distinctive status as a normative tool of social order. As we shift our attention to civil law-from the topic of terror to the problem of error-the strategies for anticipating and preventing catastrophe are perhaps less controversial. In the world of civil law, catastrophic threats originate not in Al Qaeda plots but in corporate malfeasance. The paradigmatic instance remains the Bhopal disaster, 27 and the paradigmatic response involves the assignment of risk: The law shifts risk to the party best able to assess and manage it. This is the "costs of accidents" approach pioneered by Guido Calabresi and now familiar to all students of torts. 28 Calabresi's approach can be seen as a nice illustration of the historical development described by Meyer, as tort law comes to abandon the categorical and jurisdictional approach to calamity (acts of God) and instead enshrines the principle of foreseeability. Yet as Meyer implicitly suggests, the cost of accidents applies only imperfectly in the case of catastrophes. Calabresi's system, we recall, remains largely agnostic with respect to the question of prevention or amelioration.

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From the standpoint of strict social efficiency, the decision to invest, say, in a safer workplace enjoys no particular advantage over the decision to pay damages for workplace-related injuries. In the case of catastrophe, however, the costs of amelioration are so staggeringly high that emphasis must be on prevention. This also is a central argument of Posner's Catastrophe: Risk and Response. For Posner, the law often falters in response to catastrophe as a result of the "bafflement that most people feel when they try to think about events that have an extremely low probability of occurring even if they will inflict enormous harm if they do occur." 29 At times, Posner inadvertently underscores the difficulties, and the grotesqueries, that arise from the attempt to calculate catastrophic risks. Balancing the potential benefits of a series of planned physics experiments at a new laboratory at Brookhaven against their potential costs, Posner calculates as follows: RHIC's (Brookhaven's Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider) net present value would be $400 million. This figure is arrived at by subtracting from $2.1 billion-the present value of a stream of annual benefits of $250 million for 10 years discounted at 3 percent$1.1 billion, the present value of the annual operating costs, similarly discounted, and $6oo million, the accelerator's fixed costs. But now suppose the cost of extinction of the human race, which ... can very conservatively be estimated at $6oo trillion ... 30

Clearly, there is something farcical about this reasoning, though Posner delivers it with a straight face. Still, it underscores the centrality of the claim that the specter of catastrophe upsets the costs of accidents formulae; in responding to the challenges posed by catastrophe, civil law must emphasize prevention rather than amelioration. At first blush, this point finds strong support in Ronen Shamir's contribution, "Catastrophes and Humanitarian Corporate Responsibility: A Conceptual Critique." Shamir explores the relationship between multinational corporations (MNCs) and humanitarian catastrophes, such as the unfolding genocide in the Darfur region of Sudan. Although many commentators have argued in support of submitting the atrocities of Darfur to a criminal tribunal, 31 Shamir is less interested in the perpetrators than in their corporate allies. To his credit, Shamir rejects the standard antiglobalist critique that lays the blame for all the world's disasters at the doorstop of the MNCs. At the same time, he is highly critical of the prevailing neoliberal ideology, which views the exercise of corporate social responsibility-the decision of a parent company to divest itself of a subsidiary doing business with a criminal regime, for example-as largely a matter of civic

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virtue and voluntary action. Against this prevailing ideology, which also informs the larger logic of humanitarian relief, Shamir exhorts us to use the law to prod MNCs to do more to prevent and ameliorate catastrophe. Yet beneath Shamir's normative argument, and almost concealed by it, lies a striking and troubling insight. Like Meyer, Shamir reminds us of the instability of the distinction between natural and human-made catastrophes; he notes, for example, that "it is now widely acknowledged that famines are not the result of natural causes alone" (p. 46). Instead, they typically result from a confluence of factors: political corruption, administrative ineptitude, failed infrastructure, deficient planning, and so forth. But from here, Shamir goes on to destabilize the distinction between prevention and amelioration- or to use the corollary terms in the world ofMNCs, between development and relief-that informs Posner's jurisprudence of catastrophe. Drawing on the vast literature of "dependent development," 32 Shamir points out that efforts at development may result in propping up corrupt regimes that perpetrate grave humanitarian abuses. On the other hand, relief efforts in the absence of development (e.g., sending food to a region devastated by famine) may do little to help the people on the ground and may simply contribute to the vicious logic of socioeconomic dependence. Worse yet, efforts to address one catastrophe may only exacerbate another: Imagine, for example, a program designed to eliminate catastrophic levels of infant mortality that inadvertently contributes to catastrophic overpopulation: How do we assess the efficacy and justice of such initiatives? Posner's work on catastrophe assumed a relatively stable distinction between prevention and amelioration and offered seemingly sound reasons for devoting resources to the former rather than the latter. Shamir's chapter, however, problematizes these neat and well-meaning policy recommendations. Law's efforts to respond to the threat of calamity may lead it to precipitate the very thing it is trying to prevent. This conundrum that law's efforts at prevention and amelioration may only exacerbate the problem is likewise the focus of Sylvia Schafer's chapter, "Political Catastrophe and Liberal Legal Desire: Two Stories ofRevolution, Remediation, and Return from the French Nineteenth Century." While Meyer examined the ways in which law attempts to colonize catastrophe and render it judicially manageable, a mere blip in the grid oflaw's order, Schafer examines the ways in which catastrophe upends legal order in unanticipated ways. In her reading of Balzac's Colonel Chabert, she examines how the law's tools of colonization -actuarial thinking, policies

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of indemnification, principles of risk management-all backfire in spectacular fashion in the case of the novel's eponymous protagonist. Here, law's attempts to mitigate the devastation of the Napoleonic Wars end up destroying what they aim to repair. Unable to deal with the resurfacing of a lost soldier deemed legally dead, the law succeeds where war failed-at utterly destroying the survivor. At the same time that Schafer's reading reminds us of the fragility of legal personhood, it also supports Shamir's implicit challenge to Posner. In the second half of her essay, Schafer turns her attention away from the dislocations of the Napoleonic Wars to the trauma of the revolutions of 1848. As violence gripped the continent, the law was faced with a dilemma: How was it to deal with spasms of lawless uprisings by the impoverished classes? Formally conceived, this problem perfectly recapitulates and anticipates Shamir's discussion of the social responsibility of multinational corporations. Threatened with the specter oflarge-scale chaos in 1848, some social reformers urged the path of "relief": They believed that by providing legal assistance to the poor, the impoverished class could find help in the courts and so would renounce violence in the streets. These reformers, however, were opposed by those who resisted liberalizing access to the law. Doing so, they feared, without fundamentally altering the underlying social conditions of poverty, would only embolden the poor to more violence, creating greater social upheaval. In Shamir's terms, "relief" without "development" would only lead to greater social instability. And so Schafer locates a crisis, if not a tragedy, at the heart of the liberal legal project. As the attempt to help the socially disadvantaged threatens to mobilize a "predatory collectivity," the law becomes paralyzed by the specter that its gestures of amelioration will only create greater chaos. Legal efforts to contain catastrophe are haunted by the fear that they will only aggravate it.

Amelioration We have already observed that the nature of catastrophe suggests that law's energy be devoted to anticipation and prevention rather than amelioration. Yet we have also seen that the distinction between prevention and amelioration is neither neat nor stable. Further, we have noted that attempts to ameliorate catastrophe will always remain troubled by the specter of insufficiency and belatedness, if not plagued by the concern that ameliorative gestures often exacerbate harm. Does this mean that law has no ameliorative role to play in the wake of catastrophe? This is the question addressed in the chapters by our final two contributors, Ravit Pe' erLamo Reichman and James E. Young.

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Both Reichman and Young examine the nature of the law's response to the Holocaust, perhaps the most extraordinary and emblematic catastrophe of the twentieth century. As we've seen, Meyer argues that catastrophes were once viewed as acts of God, beyond law's jurisdictional reach, but that modern law resists this approach, claiming dominion over catastrophe. Meyer's claim again finds provocative support in the case of international law's response to Nazi genocide. In an effort to bring Nazi perpetrators to justice, international jurists articulated novel incriminations, such as the crime against humanity and the crime of genocide. They also pioneered the use of unorthodox jurisdictional theories, such as universal jurisdiction. 33 Such innovations were specifically intended to bring catastrophic crimes within law's jurisdictional reach. The success of these gestures is borne out by the fact that when we think of the law's response to the Shoah, we can't help but conjure images of Goering on trial at Nuremberg or ofEichmann in the glass booth at Jerusalem. The Holocaust thus presents a prime example of catastrophe prompting law to innovate. But how do we characterize the nature and purposes of these innovations, and how do we measure "success" in terms of the prevention -amelioration continuum that we encounter throughout our volume? This question loomed large at the Nuremberg Trial, the subject of Reichman's chapter. Before, during, and after the historic trial before the International Military Tribunal, commentators asked whether any legally imposed sanction could ever right the scales of justice against the terrible weight of crimes against humanity and genocide. In his famous opening statement before the International Military Tribunal, chief allied prosecutor Robert Jackson addressed this issue when he observed, "In the prisoners' dock sit twenty-odd broken men ... It is hard now to perceive in these men as captives the power by which as Nazi leaders they once dominated much of the world and terrified most of it. Merely as individuals their fate is of little consequence to the world." 34 Hannah Arendt, years before she essayed her famous banality of evil thesis, also spoke to the adequacy of a legal response in a letter to Karl Jaspers: "It may be essential to hang Goering, but it is totally inadequate. That is, this guilt, in contrast to criminal guilt, oversteps and shatters any and all legal systems. That is why the Nazis in Nuremberg are so smug." 35 Given the unbridgeable gap between crime and sanction, what ends are served by submitting catastrophic crimes to legal judgment? Certainly, there are those who attempt to justify such a response in terms of conventional ideas of preventionthat is, deterrence. The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia 36 and the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda 37 invoke this justification

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in their enabling language, and the statute of the International Criminal Court specifically speaks of the determination "to put an end to impunity for the perpetrators of these crimes and thus to contribute to the prevention of such crimes." 38 Many observers, however, remain unconvinced by the deterrence justification. 39 Nuremberg, for example, did little to deter Pol Pot or Slobodan Milosevic, and Milosevic's trial, in turn, obviously made little impression upon the rebel leaders in Sudan. Other scholars, by contrast, defend these processes as tools of amelioration rather than of prevention. Such trials, it is argued, provide a needed account of the history of a catastrophic episode and offer a valuable forum in which memories of survivors and witnesses can be publicly shared, recognized, and honored. 40 By serving the interests of history and memory, these proceedings can help persons, groups, and nations come to terms with the dreadful legacy of catastrophe. It is precisely Nuremberg's relationship to memory that is the focus of Reichman's essay, "Committed to Memory: Rebecca West's Nuremberg." Reichman comes to the trial through the reportage of Rebecca West, the famous British novelist and writer who covered the trial for London's Daily Telegraph. If, at the Eichmann trial, Arendt was drawn to the prosecution's failure to comprehend the character of the accused, 41 West was drawn to a very different feature of the Nuremberg Trial: its boredom. West suffers no writer's block in characterizing this boredom; she returns to it time and again, capturing the quality of dullness with the most vivid language and images: "the courtroom was a citadel of boredom"; "Nuremberg ... was ... water-torture, boredom falling drop by drop on the same spot of the soul"; "the symbol of Nuremberg was a yawn"; "this was boredom on a huge historic scale." 42 Yet as Reichman makes clear, West doesn't locate Nuremberg's boredom in any particular legal failing (e.g., the ineptitude of the prosecutors or the longwindedness of the defense counsels). Rather, she locates the source ofNuremberg's boredom in disappointed expectations: the first international war crimes trial failed to deliver a spectacle commensurate with the crimes to be judged. Put another way, Nuremberg was boring because, alas, Nuremberg was a trial. This parsing invites us to see disappointed expectations as a structural feature of criminal law's contact with catastrophe: This is the corollary of our observation that all attempts at amelioration will remain belated, incomplete, and unsatisfactory. Of course, in certain respects, it is possible to see the dullness of Nuremberg as a legal success. If one of the purposes of trials of catastrophe is to reintroduce norms oflegality into

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a radically lawless space, the very dryness of the proceeding can be construed as a triumph oflegal sobriety over lawless chaos. Yet in Reichman's reading, West is less concerned with interpreting the meaning of Nuremberg's boredom than in using the experience as a means of arriving at a fuller phenomenology of the trial. For West, the experience ofboredom was deeply productive, as it created the space for memory to take root and grow. What kind of memory? Certainly not the kind of "responsible memory" that the Eichmann trial strove to encourage. By permitting survivors to testify in open court, the Eichmann trial aimed to make the trial's spectators into witnesses of the witnesses, now morally burdened with the memory of catastrophe narrated in a juridical setting. 43 For West, however, memory is not forged through the confrontation with acts of tragic witnessing. Instead, it is the experience of boredom that permits West to locate the voice of memory not simply in the courtroom and during the proceedings but just as crucially outside the courtroom, in encounters with citizens of Nuremberg. The vacancy of the words uttered in court thus makes her all the more attentive to the voices of gardeners, servants, former soldiers- Germans with whom she has chance, fleeting, yet resonant encounters during her perambulations in the ruined city. The experience ofboredom invites a distinctly modernist form of reportage in which memory is forged out of the collision of multiple and conflicting voices. The memory of catastrophe cannot be controlled or dictated by the prosecution's script. Rather, it emerges out of the dialogue created between voices inside and outside the courtroom. Through these juxtapositions and shifts of perspective, we gain insight into the meaning oflaw's confrontation with catastrophe at Nuremberg. James Young's chapter, "Mandating the National Memory of Catastrophe," is likewise concerned with the law as a means of mandating memory in the wake of the Holocaust. War crimes trials, however, play no role in his analysis. Young's interest is legislative, not judicial: He explores the law's role in mandating memory through official acts such as the creation of sites and days of commemoration. The story he tells is a fascinating one that invites comparison not only with Reichman's contribution but with Schafer's as well. In Schafer's reading of Balzac's Colonel

Chabert, we encountered the flesh and blood survivor who found himself stripped of legal identity and citizenship as a result of being falsely reported as dead. In Young's essay, by contrast, statelessness and the absence of a legal identity appear not as a consequence of catastrophe but as a prelude to it. As Arendt observed in The Origins of Totalitarianism, rendering persons stateless is a crucial step to

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denying them all human rights, including the basic right to exist. 44 Young describes Israel's provocative effort to confer posthumous Israeli citizenship upon the perished Jews of Europe, a gesture that can be read as both an effort to redress the legal injustices occasioned by the Nuremberg laws of 1935 and those suffered by Balzac's doomed protagonist. Equally provocative is his account of the legislative genesis of Yom Hashoah, Israel's official day of Holocaust remembrance. In tracking the Knesset's attempt to pick a fitting day for Holocaust commemoration on the Jewish calendar-a calendar already crowded with the burden of the Jews' long, and often calamitous, history-Young reminds us that the protection and nurturing of memory are deeply political acts, as much prompted by a vision of the present as by a respect for the past. 45 At the same time, Young ponders the matter of form, the particular mode of expression chosen by the Israeli parliament in its memorial gesture. If we tend to think of law as declarative and discursive, if not directly fulsome, 46 how do we make sense of the commemorative logic of Yom Hashoah, which honors memory through silence? Certainly, silence is a common form of paying respect to the dead, but as Young makes clear, in mandating silence over speech, Israeli law also deconstructs the logic of classic state-sponsored commemorative gestures. These earlier efforts, which often took the form of grand monumental and architectural statements, were designed to dictate the terms of collective memory and script the meaning of sacrifice to a national audience. Yom Hashoah, by contrast, resists this totalizing logic. By mandating collective silence, the Israeli law opens a space for memories to coalesce, collide, and collect. If Reichman describes a productive boredom that can give rise to memory, Young tells of a silence in which memory can speak. In its answer to catastrophe, law eschews the impulse to fix meaning. By choosing silence as its mandated response to catastrophe, the law both acknowledges the limitations of any gesture of amelioration and, at the same time, recognizes that only in the solemnity of silence can memory begin the project of repair.

Conclusion Taken as a whole, what do these essays suggest about the relationship between law and catastrophe? We began by noting two conflicting master narratives: the divine and the liberal. In the former, catastrophe serves as an instrument of law; in the latter, law emerges out of the primordial chaos of catastrophe. In the liberal genealogy, catastrophe-conceptualized as the state of nature, the war of all against

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TABLE 1.1

Regulative strategies of liberal legality

Strategy

Criminal Law (terrorism, genocidal regime)

Anticipation

Terrorism: domestic spying, torture and aggressive interrogation, preemptive military strike, etc. Genocidal regime: preemptive military strike

Prevention

Terrorism: indefinite preventive detention, torture, regime change Genocidal regime: regime change, war crimes trials (deterrence: weak justification)

Amelioration

War crimes: regime change, domestic and international trials, monuments, days of remembrance

Civil Law (corporate malfeasance such as industrial accident, collusion with genocidal regime) Promulgation and enforcement of regulatory norms (administrative law response: can have criminal law component) Assignment of corporate risk, doctrine of foreseeability (tort law response) Promulgation and enforcement of norms of safety and infrastructural development, expanded norms of corporate responsibility (administrative law response: can have criminal law component) Shifting of risk (tort law response), shareholder actions, divestment FEMA (administrative law), strict liability (tort law), humanitarian relief

all- remains law's ultimate nightmare at the same time that it provides law's raison d'etre. Law is indebted to catastrophe as it is vexed and troubled by it. As a tool of maintaining social order through rules, liberal legality is predicated on certain basic divisions and regulative strategies. At its most basic, the world of harm is divided into criminal and civil wrongs, while law's regulative strategies involve techniques of anticipation, prevention, and amelioration. In its contact with catastrophe, we have seen law's struggle to assimilate extreme events into a regulative grid (Table 1.1). Yet as our contributors have demonstrated, law's ordering strategies are neither conceptually neat nor altogether efficacious when it comes to regulating catastrophe. It is in the nature of catastrophe that it demands a legal response, at the same time that all ameliorative responses will be seen as insufficient and belated. Catastrophe demands that law's regulative strategies be devoted principally to anticipation and prevention, but as a limit condition, catastrophe has the power to distort and frustrate law's regulatory ambitions. In the domain of criminal law, draconian efforts to master the threat of catastrophic terrorist attacks threaten to

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erode liberal law's distinctive attractions as a tool of normative order. In the case of civil law, law's regulatory efforts reveal the instabilities in the distinction between prevention and amelioration, just as they threaten to exacerbate the very problems they are asked to relieve. The relationship between catastrophe and liberal law is, in the end, at once constitutive and foundational, yet also liminal and unstable. Born out of catastrophic chaos, law strives to gain dominion over unmasterable calamity. Some, but not all, of these efforts may bear the traces oflegal hubris and what Meyer describes as the colonizing impulse. We have also seen how contact with catastrophe also elicits law's humility, its respect of silence, and unscripted memory. Yet in its gestures of both hubris and humility, the law reveals its stress points in its continuing contacts with the specter of catastrophe. As the essays in this volume suggest, these stress points are both structural and contingent-built into the processes oflegality but also amenable to change and reform. And while it will fall to future scholars of law and catastrophe to explore this balance between the structural and contingent more fully, we can say with certainty that these stress points will be tested severely in the years to come.

Notes 1.

See, for example, Elizabeth Kolbert, Field Notes from a Catastrophe: Man, Nature, and

Climate Change (New York: Bloomsbury, 2006). 2.

See, for example, Laurie Garrett, The Coming Plague: Newly Emerging Diseases in a

World out of Balance (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1994).

3· Martin Rees, Our Final Hour: A Scientist's Warning: How Terror, Error, and Environmental Disaster Threaten Humankind's Future in This Century- On Earth and Beyond (New York: Basic Books, 2003). 4· See, for example, Anthony Cordesman, Terrorism, Asymmetric Waifare, and Weapons of Mass Destruction: Defending the U.S. Homeland (Westport, CT: Praeger, 2002); and

Russell D. Howard and Reid L. Sawyer, eds., Terrorism and Counterterrorism: Understanding the New Security Environment (Guilford, CT: McGraw-Hill, 2003).

5· Voltaire, The Complete Works of Voltaire, Theodore Besterman et al., eds. (Geneva: Institut et Musee Voltaire, 1968). 6. Moishe Postone and Eric Santner, eds., Catastrophe and Meaning: The Holocaust and the Twentieth Century (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2003).

7· Elie Wiesel, Night, Stella Rodway, trans. (New York: Bantam Books, 1982), 32. 8. Primo Levi, If This Is a Man, Stuart Woolf, trans. (New York: Everyman's Library, 2000), 155·

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9· See, for example, N asser Hussain, A Jurisprudence of Emergency: Colonialism and the Rule of Law (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2003). 10. See, for example, The Selected Writings ofMartin Luther (New York: Anchor Books, 1959 ). 11. Am os 1:3- 4· 12. Consider, for example, Pat Robertson's recent suggestion that God smote Ariel Sharon for "dividing God's land," http://www.cnn.com/2oo6/US/01/05/robertson.sharon/. 13. Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002). 14. See Robert Cover, "Nomos and Narrative," in Narrative, Violence, and the Law, Martha Minow, Michael Ryan, and Austin Sarat, eds. (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan

Press, 1995). 15. Judith Shklar, The Faces of Injustice (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1990 ). 16. See, for example, Radley Balko's Fox News commentary: "Sept. 11 is no longer the most catastrophic failure of government in my lifetime. Its response to Hurricane Katrina is. Government at all levels, run by both parties, regardless of race, inexcusably failed to secure the safety of the people of New Orleans. The lesson here is not the failure of one party or the other. The lesson here is the failure of government." http:/ /www.foxnews.com/ story/o,2933,168732,oo.html. 17. See, for example, the five-part series that ran in The New Orleans Times-Picayune, June 23-27, 2002, http:/ /www.nola.com/hurricane/?/washingaway/. 18. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, The Collected Writings ofRousseau, vol.11, Roger D. Masters and Christopher Kelly, eds. (Hanover, NH: University Press of New England, 1990). 19. Black's Law Dictionary Eighth Edition, Bryan A. Garner, ed. (St. Paul, MN: West Publishing, 2004), 1311. 20. For a recent critique of this process, see Cass Sunstein, Laws of Fear: Beyond the Precautionary Principle (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005). 21. For controversial answers in the affirmative, see John Yoo, The Powers of War and Peace: The Constitution and Foreign Affairs after 9/11 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005). 22. See, for example, the pieces by Daryl Mundis, Ruth Wedgwood, and Harold Koh collected in "Agora: Military Commissions," American Journal of International Law 96, no. 2 (April2oo2), 320-44. 23. See, for example, Alan Dershowitz, Why Terrorism Works: Understanding the Threat, Responding to the Challenge (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2002). 24. See, for example, Bonnie Honig, "Bound by Law? Alien Rights, Administrative Discretion, and the Politics of Technicality: Lessons from Louis Post and the First Red Scare," in The Limits of Law, Austin Sarat, Lawrence Douglas, and Martha Merrill Umphrey, eds. (Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press, 2005). 25. Michael Ignatieff, The Lesser Evil: Political Ethics in an Age of Terror (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2004).

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18

26. Richard A. Posner, Catastrophe: Risk and Response (New York: Oxford University Press, 2004). 27. See, for example, Paul Shrivastava, Bhopal: Anatomy of a Crisis (Cambridge: Ballinger, 1987). 28. Guido Calabresi, The Costs ofAccidents: A Legal and Economic Analysis (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1970 ). 29. Posner, Catastrophe: Risks and Response, 9· 30. Ibid., 140-41. 31. See, for example, Gerard Prunier, Darfur: The Ambiguous Genocide (London: Hurst, 2005). 32. See, for example, Peter Evans, Dependent Development: The Alliance ofMultinational,

State, and Local Capital in Brazil (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1979). 33. See Lawrence Douglas, The Memory of Judgment: Making Law and History in the Trials of the Holocaust (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2001). 34· Trial of the Major War Criminals before the International Military Tribunal, vol. 1 (Nuremberg: International Military Tribunal, 1947), 99· 35. Hannah Arendt-Karl Jaspers Correspondence 1926-1969, Lotte Kohler and Hans Saner, eds., Robert Kimber and Rita Kimber, trans. (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1992), 54 (footnote omitted). 36. http://www.un.org/icty!legaldoc-e/index.htm; see specifically, Security Council Resolution 827, S/RES/827 (1993). 37. http://65.18.216.88/ENGLISH/ Resolutions/955e.htm; see specifically, Security Council Resolution 955, S/RES/955 (1994). 38. William A. Schabas, An Introduction to the International Criminal Court (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001), 167. 39. See, for example, Martha Minow, Between Vengeance and Forgiveness: Facing History

after Genocide and Mass Violence (Boston: Beacon Press, 1998). 40. See, for example, Douglas, The Memory ofJudgment. 41. Hannah Arendt, Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil (New York: Penguin, 1994). 42. Rebecca West, A Train of Powder (New York: Viking Press, 1955), 3, 8, 9, n. 43. See, for example, Hanna Yablonka, The State ofIsrael vs. AdolfEichmann, Ora Cummings, trans. (New York: Schocken Books, 2004); and Douglas, The Memory of Judgment. 44. Hannah Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism (New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1951), 275· 45. See also James Young, The Texture of Memory: Holocaust Memorials and Meaning (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1993); and At Memory's Edge: After-Images ofthe Ho-

locaust in Contemporary Art and Architecture (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2000 ). 46. See, for example, Peter Goodrich, Legal Discourse: Studies in Linguistics, Rhetoric, and Legal Analysis (London: Macmillan, 1987).

Catastrophe: Flowing Up the Ground of Reason LINDA ROSS MEYER

Catastrophe. The World Trade Center collapsing before our eyes, the San Francisco Earthquake, the Chicago Fire, Hurricane Katrina, the sinking of the Titanic, the engulfing of Pompeii, the Great Plague, nuclear war, the death of a child, the betrayal of a friend. These are all things that come to mind when one hears the word catastrophe. Whatever it means, it is something big and it is something bad. From its Greek roots, catastrophe is literally an "overturning." The metaphor was originally understood as an overturning of earth, a "plowing." Catastrophe, then, is a plowing under of what has been sown. This crop failure, in the ancient world that this word described, is the defeat of all expectations, labors, hopes, plans. It means the farmer, despite all his care and hard work, will starve. Catastrophe is also captured in English by similar metaphors: upsetting, overthrowing, upending. What is the domain of the catastrophic? What ground does it plow up? One understanding of catastrophe is made possible by Judith Shklar in Faces of Injustice. 1 She argues that we-the-polity divide harmful events into either injustices or misfortunes. Injustices are wrongs done to one by others-overturnings of normative expectations. Misfortunes are all the "left over" bad things that happen that are not injustices. She argues that the boundary between injustice and misfortune is a cultural and political one: It shifts over time in response to changing expectations and new technologies of prevention, and it is also subject to conscious political change. In Shklar's view, we ought to trust the voices of those harmed and listen to their judgments about the boundaries between these categories. A recurring theme in her work is that many of the things we look at as misfortunes ought instead to be seen as injustices- especially "passive injustice"-failure to stand up for the rights of others and failure to alleviate the suffering of others. The traditional legal rule that there is no general duty to act to help others would be

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a prime example of the way in which, Shklar says, we have tolerated injustice by labeling it misfortune. The way Shklar sees it, injustice is what overturns normative expectations. Misfortunes, by contrast, are failures or losses that one simply has to live (or die) with. They are a natural and expected part of life. Her argument is that we ought to raise our expectations and turn many of these misfortunes into normative overturnings. We should see them as injustices. One suspects that Shklar would argue that the category of catastrophe is the same as the category of misfortune and just as subject to political reframing. So understood, many of the events we characterize as "catastrophes" should also be conceived as "injustices" if we acknowledge the polity's responsibility to take victims' views seriously and recognize affirmative duties to act to aid others. In my view, catastrophes are in yet another category. They are not misfortunes in the sense of expected failures or "ordinary" losses that come with the business oflife, in part because they are so large and overwhelming that no "business oflife" can go on in the usual way. They are unexpected, normative overturnings, but they are not injustices either, because they challenge the very categories that form our judgment of just and unjust. Catastrophes can be remade into injustices as Shklar suggests, but that takes away their character as catastrophic. So I would carve out a special place for catastrophe that is neither misfortune nor injustice. Catastrophes are normative overturnings, yet not injustices. They overturn our very faith in justice, plow up the ground itself. Catastrophes look like cosmic betrayals, not calculated risks. Catastrophes, whether local or international, are moments when we confront the limits of our normative world. Catastrophes in this sense may or may not be a result of human agency. I would argue that the World Trade Center toppling down was catastrophic, despite being the result of human agency, because it brought into tragic relief the reality of global normative conflict against democratic capitalism. Characterizing it as crime would make (made) it easier to swallow, but the reason it was so profoundly disturbing was because of the depth of the antidemocratic and anti-American sentiments it revealed. We were suddenly confronted by a worldview that takes democracy and capitalism, our normative ground, to be evil. Likewise, the Great Plague and the 1760 earthquake in Lisbon were catastrophes in part because the magnitude of the chaos and death they caused shook the world's belief in God and its faith in the social order. But catastrophes need not be on a grand social scale. A betrayal by a trusted spouse, friend, or child can cause

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21

one to lose faith in the normative world, to have the ground plowed up under one's feet. Catastrophes, then, are not just bad luck, harmful events in the world, expected losses, or injustices but events that call into question our normative ground and cause radical normative disorientation. 2 They are events that cause us to feel "unheimlich" 3- not at home in the world. Everything we took for granted is open to question. Everything we counted on is missing. We are plunged into an alien, senseless wasteland of the sort Katka or T. S. Eliot describes. Importantly, when we confront the failure of our normative ground, the edge of reason, we also experience our own lack of control. Where reason fails, so does prediction. The future is suddenly dark and uncertain. We here face our own limits, our own mortality. In Heidegger's terms, we experience "being-toward-death." In experiencing this finitude, we also experience our separation from others (the "they"). Because death is mine alone, I am I. We here run aground on our own limited and delimited individuality and, for the first time, know in a more than merely intellectual way that the "I" must always be experiencing death; there is always a path closing, a possibility gone, an end. This experience of senselessness, lack of control, and mortality that catastrophe plows up is profoundly uncomfortable and demands a response. Our responses to catastrophe take three forms (at least). The first form is denial. We deny that the event is a challenge to our normative structures, and we reframe it as injustice, not catastrophe. This is our law's specialty. Law is constantly colonizing catastrophe, reframing it as injustice, expanding the bounds and jurisdiction of law, and consequently expanding the zone of human control and responsibility. Tort provides a good analogy here for what is true oflaw more generally. In tort, liability turns on foreseeability, a term that tends to expand naturally with experience. As soon as something has happened, however unpredictable or unexpected, it becomes foreseeable. Likewise, when any new form of misfortune occurs, legislatures rush to create new law to "fix" the problem, turning misfortune into injustice. In the wake of any disaster, one finds new legal regulation. In the case of the World Trade Center, we began from almost the outset to frame the event as a familiar form of injustice: a crime in need of retribution, coupled with negligence in preventing the attack-a glitch in the building firewall construction or airport safety precautions or intelligence-gathering protocols that can be improved upon next time. Pre-

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dictably, we made new building codes, airport procedures, crimes, investigative tools, and so forth. Likewise, after Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans, we blamed FEMA, we blamed the city government of New Orleans, we blamed the Army Corps of Engineers; we responded with new procedures, new rules, new regulations and consoled ourselves that next time we would be ready, next time we would be in control. In these reframings, the catastrophic norm-overturning nature of the event hides itself, and catastrophe is reread as conventional injustice, ala Shklar. This response is the denial of catastrophe. A second response is to "read" the catastrophe nihilistically. The nihilist acknowledges the normative challenge that the catastrophe represents and stays there. The normative ground is gone, anomie reigns, war and suicide are the only options. All that remains are the subjective claims of individual voices and the power that allows one voice, temporarily, to speak over the others. In Shklar's urging that we should listen to how the victims of harm characterize that harm, because there is no absolute boundary between misfortune and injustice, there is a little hint of this nihilism. If she gives up her Rousseau-like optimism that there is a "natural" sense of justice that grounds and justifies these victims' claims, as it seems she must to hold that the misfortune-justice line is socially constructed, politics becomes the rule of the squeaky wheel or a civil war of competing demands. Every subjective complaint is as good as another. Justice cannot be picked out from jealousy. But a third response is to see what we can from the perspective catastrophes open for us. We can stay in that very uncomfortable, unhomelike place and look. The catastrophic is a place from which we experience our finitude. Is there more to see there than death? Catastrophe, the place where reason runs out, lets us see ourselves as unable to control the world. Catastrophe is what we didn't expect and couldn't predict. We see the world as outside our control and therefore other than us. We see that the normative ground, whatever it is and if it exists, is not of our making or within our control or even amenable to our reason. We stand before the world. The world is a given, beyond control. And so are we. We see that we did not make ourselves. For the first time, we have a perspective from which we can notice that our own urge to make sense of everything is itself a given, a grace, an unreasonable demand for reason. From the place where reason fails, we can see reason itself as our calling, a call from outside reason. The insight that we are not self-made is also a moment in which we can see the basis of human responsibility. We notice that we are being receptive (respon-

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23

sive) to this world, this other, on the basis of limitations we must own without choosing. We have obligations we did not undertake, like the very basic obligation to reason (Kant's categorical imperative), but which nonetheless make us what we are. There is a fundamental injustice in all of this: We didn't choose ourselves, yet we are obligated. We are in our very essence something of a catastropheungrounded, under the yoke of painful obligations we could not expect or imagine. Acting responsibly (reasonably), then, is itself an act of faith or, asKant puts it, an act done out of awe for the Law. This Law is the law ofreason, a given that calls us, impels us to make sense of the world, impels even our knee-jerk first response: the making of injustice out of catastrophe. This original obligation to make sense is itself ungrounded and unreasoned. The Kantian man of duty does his duty even though it hurts, regardless of consequences or happiness. He does it because that is the only way he can be responsible, the only way he can be. He responds on the basis of a given commitment to be reasonable, itself ungrounded. Within the moment of action, he cannot stop and consider the consequences or the cost or even the basis of the duty. The duty and his sense of awe for the duty are all. This is heroism. Catastrophes create the conditions in which heroism can shine forth because it is only when the usual social system of rewards for virtue is swept away that one can see an act done purely from duty. Catastrophe breaks down the social expectations of justice, leaves us on the brink of nihilism, destroys our faith that we will reap the rewards of our virtuous and arduous sowing. Yet in catastrophes, as we know, we find heroes. Heroes take on an impossible task and are willing to sacrifice in the faith that they are doing right, regardless of the consequences. From the brink of nihilism, catastrophe allows us, through the heroic, to snatch a glimpse at the core insight of human responsibility-that we are obligated to respond on the basis of an unreasonable demand that we be reasonable, even when there is no reason to do it. Derrida calls this kind of phenomenon the aporia of justice. Positive law never captures justice, in part because language is always too general, rules too rigid, but also because one must act, in the end, without knowing everything. Both are problems of finitude-the inability of categorical words to capture the infinite variety of experience and the inability of humans to gather all the information for all time. Justice is a call that we humans can never answer adequately because every determinable rule or system is necessarily inadequate to the particular: "justice exceeds law and calculation ... the unpresentable exceeds the determinable." 4 Derrida would, perhaps, call catastrophe a moment in which we see this truth about law,

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and law is "deconstructed." Drucilla Cornell explains that "the deconstructibility of law is what allows for the possibility of transformation," a moment of "institutional humility before justice. " 5 From this perspective, catastrophe allows us to glimpse a more problematic understanding of justice itself-a justice beyond reason, a justice that calls us but is never realized, a justice "between the lines" and just out of view. This justice-as-aporia that impels the deconstructive project may be something like the givenness (or grace) of reason that I am saying is revealed when the "usual" normative framework fails. But it is not quite the same because Derrida's view might seem to imply that catastrophe (in the sense of normative dislocation) can itself be "created" (and therefore tamed and controlled) by deconstructive writing itself. Catastrophes would then become something we create in academic papers pointing out the deconstructibility oflaw. But one doesn't come to a point of normative dislocation in one's armchair, though one can "pretend" there, as Hume did, to doubt everything. Catastrophe can only really come upon one when all the reassuring reliability of everyday life can no longer contradict the mental exercise of normative deconstruction. Derrida's justice-as-aporia is also only one possibility that may be opened when we confront catastrophe. His justice-as-aporia recognizes that justice cannot be captured for all time or in words. Justice-as-aporia is a kind of equity, always in conflict with law, always particular and fleeting. But even equity of this sort is only one possibility opened by catastrophe, for whatever we can or cannot say about it, we still know it when we see it and revere such Solomonic judgment. But the given at the edge of reason may not be only a still-familiar though inarticulate equity. It may not be at all. Or it may be grace-so foreign to us that we cannot even know it when we see it, but have to take it on faith. The moment of catastrophe may also be a moment of the deepest transformation -a transformation so complete and unsettling that we do not even recognize ourselves. This third response to catastrophe, then, allows for the possibility of experiencing grace. To further illustrate these three approaches to catastrophe-denial, nihilism, and openness to grace-I call on an old story, that ofJob. Job is a very careful, responsible man, a worrier, and a planner. He is "careful not to do anything evil" (Job 1:1). He is so careful that he even offers sacrifices on behalf of his children the morning after they attend a feast, just in case "one of them might have sinned by insulting God unintentionally" (Job 1:5). Job ticks off

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his Leviticus checklist: He helped orphans and widows, he acted justly and fairly, he was faithful to his wife, he treated his servants fairly, he bought clothes for the poor, he never cheated even when he could get away with it, he never trusted in riches, never worshiped false gods, never exulted over his enemies' misfortunes, never turned away travelers, never concealed his sins. As a result, he "always expected to live a long life and to die at home in comfort" (29:18). But instead, "everything I fear and dread comes true." His livestock are stolen, his children die, his body is so riddled with hideous disease that his friends don't recognize him, and his wife avoids him. His future, "roots and stock," is destroyed. He suffers catastrophe, an overturning of everything he has hoped for and planned. Job doesn't understand it; he has tried his utmost to follow the law, and yet he gets no justice. His good deeds, the tremendous burden and struggle to be vigilant and responsible, are all for nothing. He complains to God "as soon as I sin, I'm in trouble with you, but when I do right, I get no credit" (10:15). "Why is man so important to you? ... Won't you look away long enough for me to swallow my spit?" (7:17-19). Until this point, Job has been a man of the law, perhaps even "the" reasonable man of tort law, foreseeing and averting harm, buying insurance, following the law meticulously, and paying his taxes on time. His world is grounded in law, and it seems to him that God has made some mistake. His first response, then, is to reframe his plight as injustice. He is a man of the law in more than one sense, for he has himself been an esteemed and honest judge in his town, and he thinks and speaks in legal terms, asking "why doesn't God set a time for judging, a day of justice for those who serve him?" (29:11-25; 24:1). He asks again and again for justice, for a chance to "argue my case" with God (13:3). He asserts, "I am ready to risk my life. I've lost all hope, so what if God kills me? I am going to state my case to him ... I am ready to state my case, because I know I am in the right" (13:14-15, 18). But how does one bring God to account? "Should I try force? Try force on God? Should I take him to court? Who would make him go?" (9:19). He has four faithful friends who come to commiserate with him, and together they try to sort out why he is suffering such unmerited catastrophe. It is a legal debate, a courtlike discussion in the style of adversary argument. Three of Job's friends have trouble believing that God would allow good men to suffer so acutely, and therefore, they reason, Job must be guilty of some fault. The friends, then, take the first approach to catastrophe: denial. They try to reframe the catastrophe as a

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just punishment for Job's injustice. Eliphaz argues, "evil does not grow in the soil, nor does trouble grow out of the ground. No! Man brings trouble on himself, as surely as sparks fly up from a fire" (5:6-7). Bildad says, "your children must have sinned against God, and so he punished them as they deserved" (8:4). And Zophar admonishes, "God is punishing you less than you deserve" (n:6). Job is impatient with them. "I will never say that you men are right," he maintains. "I will insist on my innocence to my dying day" (27:5). But the failure of the possibility of framing his suffering in the usual category as injustice means law has failed. This failure of law leaves Job with the second response, nihilism. Job laments, "I am innocent, but I no longer care. I am sick ofliving. Nothing matters; innocent or guilty, God will destroy us. When an innocent man suddenly dies, God laughs. God gave the world to the wicked. He made all the judges blind. And if God didn't do it, who did?" (9:21-24). Life no longer makes sense, "my plans have failed; my hope is gone" (17:n), chaos reigns, and Job curses the day of his birth and longs only for the relative peace of death in a land of" darkness, shadows, and disorder" (10:22). Finally, his three older friends give up arguing with him, and his youngest friend, Elihu, speaks his mind. He is angry that the older men have given up defending God. He repeats his conviction that God is just, but he stresses that "if God decided to do nothing at all, no one could criticize him" (34:29). He argues that "those who are godless keep on being angry, and even when punished, they don't pray for help ... But God teaches men through suffering and uses distress to open their eyes ... Be careful not to turn to evil; your suffering was sent to keep you from it" (36:13, 15, 21). Elihu gives us the first hint that there may be a third response: a response of openness to catastrophe. Finally, God himself comes to speak to Job. He has granted Job's request for a hearing, but He makes it clear that He is not there to answer Job's accusations. Instead, He is plaintiff, not defendant, and He demands an answer from Job: "Stand up now like a man and answer the questions I ask you" (38:3). This move is critical: God is not called by the other; He does the calling. He is active, not reactive, not responding. It is instead Job who is called to respond, able to respond, required to respond, responsible. God first points out that Job is not to be his own judge-he is unqualified to have jurisdiction here. "Were you there when I made the world? ... Have you been to the springs in the depths of the sea? Have you walked on the floor of the ocean?" (38:4, 16).

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Second, God points out that the laws Job relies on cannot bind God. Following God's law gives him no settled expectations, no right to demand anything. "Do you know the laws that govern the skies, and can you make them apply to the earth? ... Can you shout orders to the clouds? ... Will a wild ox work for you? ... Can you catch Leviathan with a fishhook ... Will he make an agreement with you and promise to serve you forever? Will you tie him like a pet bird, like something to amuse your servant girls? Will fishermen bargain over him?" (38:33-34; 39:9; 41:1, 4-6). Third, God points out that other creatures do not live in concern and fear for the future and that, perhaps, Job has been too obsessive about his security and his calculated planning. The creature of God is not to act like an actuary. The ostrich "leaves her eggs on the ground for the heat in the soil to warm them. She is unaware that a foot may crush them or a wild animal break them. She acts as if the eggs were not hers, and is unconcerned that her efforts were wasted. It was I who made her foolish and did not give her wisdom. But when she begins to run, she can laugh at any horse and rider" (39:14-18). The horses "rush into battle with all their strength. They do not know the meaning of fear, and no sword can turn them back" (39:21-22). Job responds twice. First, he says, "What can I answer? I will not try to say anything else. I have already said more than I should." But God is not satisfied and calls on him again to answer "like a man." A man stands and answers to the call of the other. A man must respond, be responsible. Job's second response is this: "You ask how I dare question your wisdom when I am so very ignorant. I talked about things I did not understand, about marvels too great for me to know ... In the past I knew only what others had told me, but now I have seen you with my own eyes. So I am ashamed of all I have said and repent in dust and ashes" (42:3, 5-6). Job's answer, then, is to acknowledge his finitude and repent. He was wrong to call God to answer. God is the other, the unanswerable, the not-called-to-respond. He was wrong to make God into a security dispenser. As Elihu said, suffering has brought him wisdom. But more, he has seen God with his own eyes. Nothing he has been told before has prepared him for this. All his preconceptions are gone; all is changed. Job is now open to a completely unforeseen grace. God restores Job's fortunes then and punishes his first three friends, "because you did not speak the truth about me, the way my servant Job did" (42:7). He asks Job, then, to pray for his friends, and then He "answers Job's prayer." He does not answer in court, but in prayer, an entirely different venue. He answers with grace, not justice.

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Job, it seems, was right to recognize that God did not do (human) justice but wrong to complain of it. Job's friends, who tried to assimilate God to human justice and expectation, made God "angry." They "did not tell the truth" about God. They made the mistake of creating a mechanical God, a God of Reason, a God within human control, a cosmos controlled by and accessible to human understanding. In doing so, they thereby refuse to see the "other" as other at all. They deny the normative overturning that is catastrophe and reframe it in terms of justice to make catastrophe fit the m old of reason. The problem is, they believe, that Job simply hasn't figured out what went wrong, but once his friends uncover the unknown sin, all will be explained. This is the response of denial, which treats catastrophe as a failure of foresight to be facto red into an improved predictive mechanism for the future. Catastrophe gradually loses its character as other and is continually colonized by reason, as a kind of ever-expanding foreseeability. Catastrophe is unable, then, to arrest us, cause us to pause in terror, wonder, or awe. It cannot reach us, and therefore it can neither destroy nor transform us. When Job's friends' final acknowledgment of the undeserved nature of Job's catastrophe destroys even their best attempts to reframe it, the three friends fall silent, unable to defend God further. They, like Job, sink into a lassitude, boredom, and hopelessness that is the second response to catastrophe-the "last man's" nihilism. 6 Job must recognize that there is catastrophe in the world, and good people suffer. But the other is not bound by law, cannot be controlled or ordered about by man. The other is other, beyond Job's reach, knowledge, ken. Indeed, in Job's encounter with God, he uncovers the ground of responsibility. He must respond to the call of justice, this new justice that he cannot understand or rationalize, but it need not respond to him. He is responsible. God, however, is not responsible, but other. Job must give up justifying himself to God by the law. Finally, Job acknowledges his finitude and repents, accepting what God has done. He gives up his claim, and he answers the call of the other in the face of catastrophe, ready to give up his life "in dust and ashes" or to receive it again as an undeserved gift, his birthday no longer accursed to him. His death is all that is left to him, all he can respond with; he is struck by catastrophe down to the nub of his self. He owns only his finitude. His true commitment to God can only shine forth in the moment of catastrophe, when he has nothing left to gain from it. He is then truly responding on the basis of duty alone; he is then heroic. Only then can we (doubting devils) see Job's commitment as completely pure and un -self-interested.

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Only then can he "repent" in a completely pure and un-self-interested way, for he hates even his own life. The Kantian experiment of true duty is what the Devil demands and that of which Job ultimately proves worthy. In the nearness to God that catastrophe brings, Job's near-nihilism is at last replaced with awe, the acceptance of possibility, gift, and grace. If we take the first response to catastrophe, and always restructure the story we tell

about catastrophe to turn catastrophe into injustice, we regain our feet, but we lose an opportunity to see ourselves and the world differently. We lose the possibility for heroism and compassion and the possibility of experiencing grace. Heroes don't usually appear in stories of justice and injustice. The person who aids another in a catastrophic setting and without any hope of reward is not a hero, but someone who is merely doing what he or she ought to do. And in fact, the law may discover that the hero should have done so earlier or differently and is still guilty of injustice. Heroism, and the dignity we ascribe to it, disappears in the hindsight bickering over exactly what course of action would have been most effective. 7 From the perspective of reason, we can no longer see the relevance of devotion to duty (which, after all, is not within reason's grasp) and can only judge the act by its conformity to a perfectly rational calculation. Hence, reframing catastrophe as injustice hides the heroes. Second, we owe victims of catastrophe turned to injustice their just deserts. There is no more compassion, only compensation. Outpourings of money for destitute persons are only what is right, not what is good. These gifts do not create new connections forged of compassion and gratitude, or express solidarity and community,8 but become only a grim and necessary satisfaction of tort claims, a sort of compensation that usually results in resentment and ends relationships rather than creating them. Justice replaces a gift economy with a market economy and destroys the community that gift exchanges may create. Of course, one would always rather be owed than be given because the former generates no obligations (or gratitude or return), whereas the latter does. And in our market culture, receiving "charity" is demeaning. Goldberg v. Kelly (397 U.S. 254, 1970) famously changed a gift frame into a justice frame; recipients of welfare benefits are "entitled" to rather than merely given them. There seems something ennobling about having entitlements rather than gifts. It seems to bespeak equality between the giver and receiver. Yet something is still lost, even if something else is gained. The benefit turned to entitlement is no longer a sign of care or concern,

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but just "what is owed." As a result, the relationship easily comes to seem adversarial. There is no reason, anymore, for the giver to err on the side of generosity but a tendency to give as little as necessary, as little as is "due." 9 Likewise, the receiver now has standing to complain that the benefit is too little, instead of experiencing the care and solidarity the gift shows or being anxious to live up to the obligation and trust it imposes. Third, if we respond to catastrophe with denial, our normative ground is never challenged but is instead reinforced by refusing to allow catastrophe to let us stand before the edges of our reality. No radical new possibilities are opened. We experience no humility or self-interrogation or transformative potential. So not only do we give no grace, but we also receive none. What would transformative grace look like? To make it more concrete, I return to the examples given earlier of the three kinds of catastrophe: those caused by human agency, those involving widespread destruction, and those that are personal. Seen in the conventional framework of injustice, the September n attacks lead us to set about demanding justice and reinforcing values of capitalism and liberal democracy in the world. But we could also face up to the disquieting, catastrophic aspect of those attacks, the thing that made them so much more disconcerting than the Oklahoma City bombing, for example. We can stand fearlessly at the edge of the chaos and confront the depth of our enemy's hatred of us, along with the possibility that capitalism and liberal democracy are not the solid normative ground we thought they were. Maybe there are other truths outside our ken that we could hear if we listen. Maybe our enemies have a role to play in our own national transformation. Maybe we can see the "other" across the divide. The massive social dislocation and destruction wreaked by the Great Plague were seen, from an injustice perspective, as a judgment from God, requiring inquisitions and a redoubling and centralizing of legal authority to quell evil. 10 But maybe the catastrophe also allowed some to see the normative framework itself as flawed. Maybe catastrophe showed that God shouldn't be understood as a reward dispenser, and maybe the Reformation and the Enlightenment, in their different ways, could be understood as flowing from a response to catastrophe that fundamentally transformed the normative ground. Abuse, the end of a marriage, and the death of a child are also places where catastrophe tears away the normative landlines of one's life. That moment can either be understood as an injustice (as it often is in divorce, criminal law, or tort litigation) or as an opportunity for mourning, listening in the void, being open

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to something new, unsettling, and "other." The story of Job tells of this kind of transformation. A more secular example of personal transformative grace is found in Annie Proulx's novel The Shipping News. 11 Quoyle, a bland doormat of a character who is the passive, stunted victim of an unfaithful, child-selling spouse and a cruel boss, magically uncoils in the warmth of cold Newfoundland and discovers new bonds. Logic, Proulx's wordplay makes you see, has nothing to do with grace. Quoyle's journey away from all that is terra cognita to the literal unknown of New-foundland gives him a new set of possibilities-possibilities he never before knew existed. He becomes a writer, he learns how to boat, he finds moorings, he finds love, he even becomes a hero. In the course of the novel, he is transformed from a feeble outcast to a strong, warm, integral member of an irrational, generous community. Proulx uses all the symbolism of resurrection throughout her novel to underscore Quoyle's transformative rebirth. From the edge of reason, the edge of the world, one can see possibilities beyond reason. In sum, when a catastrophe challenges the normative ground from which we make sense of the world, we are predisposed (by our own rational nature) to "read" that catastrophe as an injustice. We don't want to remain in that morally bewildering and lost place, and if we do, we risk nihilism. But moving too quickly to reframe the pain as injustice rather than catastrophe may obscure and indeed eliminate the opportunity to see heroism and compassion and to experience the illumination or transformation that Derrida's transcendent "mystical" justice or Martin Luther's radical grace or Kant's "awe" or Heidegger's "call" of care always urges on us.

Notes With thanks to Austin Sarat, Martha Umphrey, Nasser Hussain, Lawrence Douglas, Roger Berkowitz, and the participants in the workshop on Catastrophe and Law at the Amherst Department of Law, Jurisprudence, and Social Thought for inviting me to give this paper and challenging, redirecting, and honing my thoughts. Many thanks also to Jeff, Dan, and Amy Meyer, Sandy Meiklejohn, Melissa and Doug Logan, Steve Gilles, Steve Latham, and Shai Lavi for catastrophic conversations and to Emilie Waters for brilliant research assistance. 1.

Judith Shklar, Faces of Injustice (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1992).

2. Friedrich Nietzsche, The Genealogy of Morals, Waiter Kaufmann, trans. (New York: Penguin, 1969), 68: "What really arouses indignation against suffering is not suffering as

such but the senselessness of suffering."

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3. Martin Heidegger, Being and Time, John Macquarrie and Edward Robinson, trans. (New York: Harper & Row, 1962), 232. 4. Jacques Derrida, "Force of Law: The Mystical Foundation of Authority," Cardozo Law

Review 11 (1990 ), 971. 5· Drucilla Cornell, "The Violence of the Masquerade," Cardozo Law Review 11 (1990), 1060-62. 6. Friedrich Nietzsche, "Thus Spoke Zarathustra," in The Philosophy of Nietzsche,

Thomas Common, trans. (New York: Modern Library Edition, 1950 ). In Section 2, the outworn philosophy advocates "sleep, the lord of the virtues." 7. With one slight twist. The lawyers or judges who bring about justice in the wake of

social norm breakdown then are the heroes of the story. They become the heroes who are doing their duty without regard to selfish motives (e.g., Atticus Finch). Yet, when a justice perspective is brought to bear on them, we see only what more they could have done, as in a malpractice case, or how the system ought to be improved. 8. Lewis Hyde distinguishes gift and market economies and describes how the gift circle

of potlatch ceremonies connected Native American tribes to each other and cemented relationships. The Gift: Imagination and the Erotic Life of Property (New York: Random House, 1983).

9· Philippe Nonet shows how workers' compensation boards in California became less

generous when their jobs became framed by legal process and legal ordering. Administrative

Justice: Advocacy and Change in a Government Agency (Hartford, CT: Russell Sage Foundation, 1969). 10. Robert C. Palmer, English Law in the Age of the Black Death, 1248-1381 (Chapel Hill:

North Carolina University Press, 1993). 11. Annie Proulx, The Shipping News (New York: Scribner's, 1991).

Catastrophes and Humanitarian Corporate Responsibility: A Conceptual Critique RONEN SHAMIR

In recent years, new demands for legalizing and for establishing a right to humanitarian intervention have been firmly placed on the international agenda. Still, most attention is given to the actions of states and suprastate bodies that are expected to intervene in protecting the human rights of victim populations. In this chapter, I argue that the duties of multinational corporations (MNCs) that operate in areas where humanitarian intervention is considered should also be addressed. Premised on the idea that MNCs are in an increasingly strategic position to anticipate, prevent, and contribute to the alleviation of catastrophes in many host countries, we should begin thinking about creating a framework for sanctioning corporate humanitarian intervention-mediated through their duties to protect, anticipate, and prevent violations of human rights-even before considering armed humanitarian intervention by foreign countries and international organizations. Yet beyond the normative engine that drives this chapter, my primary theoretical and empirical effort is to show how contemporary corporate practices are geared away from assuming binding legal obligations. I show this by looking at prevailing notions of corporate social responsibility (CSR) in relation to humanitarianism. I try to show that the basic disposition seems to be away from binding, enforceable, and sanctioned legal obligations and toward reliance on voluntarism, altruism, and self-regulation. Fusing analytical and normative dimensions, the discussion develops as follows. I first introduce the field of corporate social responsibility, point to some of its most basic characteristics, and highlight some of the conceptual debates about the desired meaning and application of the term. I next consider some basic principles of humanitarianism and point to some leading trends and debates concerning its trajectory. In the third section, I argue that through their respective locations

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within the neoliberal conceptual framework of the relationship among states, markets, and civil society, we can appreciate the structural homology between prevalent practices of humanitarianism and contemporary corporate-inspired notions of social responsibility. The fourth and fifth sections consider two concrete cases in which corporate social responsibility and humanitarianism intermesh or potentially intermesh. I conclude with some remarks concerning future potential obligations of corporations in times of catastrophes.

On Corporate Social Responsibility Talisman Energy Inc. (formerly, British Petroleum Canada) is a multinational oil and gas producer and a natural gas supplier incorporated in Canada. It is among the top sixty companies on the Toronto Stock Exchange and is also traded on the New York Stock Exchange. In its annual report for 2002, Talisman reported a net income of Can$524 million and a total assets value of Can$11,594 million. On its Web site, alongside its annual report, Talisman also published its corporate responsibility report for 2002, which stated the following: At Talisman, corporate social responsibility means conducting activities in an economically, socially and environmentally responsible manner. It also includes working together with stakeholder groups to identify constructive solutions to shared problems. We believe that our operations bring direct benefits to the communities in which we work, including the creation of jobs, expansion oflocal infrastructure and support of community projects that create opportunities for a better future. As a responsible business, we also believe it is our duty to observe and promote ethical business practices and advocate respect and tolerance by and for all people. In 2002, we took steps to further integrate corporate responsibility activities and objectives within our corporate governance and management systems and expanded our reporting by enhancing disclosure regarding environmental and economic transparency. The 2002 Corporate Responsibility Report details these developments and provides a broad overview of our social, environmental and economic activities in each of our principal geographic regions (http://www .talisman-energy.com).

Talisman's thirty-six-page social responsibility report covered issues such as human rights, community programs, ethical business conduct, employee relations, environmental audits, waste management issues, and transparency practices. The report was certified by PricewaterhouseCoopers (PWC), a global auditing firm. The report was structured along the suggested principles of the Global Reporting

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Initiative (GRI) and followed the Triple Bottom Line model (economic, environmental, and social reporting) that in recent years has emerged as a blueprint for "responsible" reporting. Among its human rights activities, Talisman reported that it established a security policy to deal with the conduct of national defense forces protecting corporate facilities. It reported that this policy emerged out of its experience in Sudan, where it tried to prevent the use of its oil field facilities for "non-defensive purposes." Talisman also reported on its human rights training initiatives and projects in Sudan and Colombia as well as on its specific management efforts to promote peace in these two countries. Talisman was thus directly involved in social, political, and diplomatic activities that until recently were assumed to belong with governments, international institutions, and nongovernmental organizations. The activities of Talisman will occupy us in latter parts of this chapter. For now, suffice it to say that as this example shows, the ideas and practices of corporate social responsibility have in recent years been rapidly institutionalized and professionalized. Corporate social responsibility is increasingly incorporated into managerial systems and organizational culture practices, exponentially developed and practiced by experts of various sorts (accountants, auditors, consultancy firms, public relations firms, lawyers, and other new specialists in "social responsibility"), and studied in business management schools. Serious debates about the substantive merit of CSR relative to its role as a marketing and image-management device are common.' Nevertheless, it seems quite certain that the evolution of CSR into a professional area of expertise and into a field of action that is widely employed by corporations has profound effects on the very meaning and scope of social responsibility. Indeed, this assigned meaning is the major currency that is negotiated in the CSR field. At one end of the spectrum are players who associate the term responsibility with an ever-increasing set of moral duties and legal obligations. These players-sometimes referred to as "confrontational" actors-try to invest the idea of CSR with binding and enforceable rules. They envision it as a set of regulated structures of corporate governance operating at the national and transnationallevels. 2 At the other end of the spectrum are corporations and a host of other affiliated players who associate the concept of CSR with voluntary, nonenforceable regulatory practices. Thus, corporate activities currently encompass a variety of declarations and commitments, including "codes of conduct," "mission statements," and "social auditing schemes," all designed to display corporate acceptance of the general idea that they

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do bear social responsibilities. Yet the most distinctive common denominator of all these corporate-based notions of social responsibility is the voluntary-at times altruistic and at times utilitarian-meaning of the term. Attempts to move CSR into the enforceable domain of formal regulation have made little headway. For example, the European Commission recently rejected proposals to adopt a regulatory approach that would have subjected corporations to mandatory social and environmental reporting. The EC emphasized the "voluntary nature of CSR" and clarified that it did not intend to impose responsible behavior on companies by means of compulsory regulation. 3 Likewise, attempts to subject MNCs to the jurisdiction of the recently established International Criminal Court on the grounds that MNCs should be held liable for violations of internationallaw had also been aborted. 4 Attempts to curb corporate power through law also involve the mobilization of the "developed" legal systems of rich countries to police and sanction corporate practices that take place in impoverished and exploited countries. A case in point concerns the attempt to subject MNCs to U.S. federal jurisdiction by invoking the Alien Tort Claims Act. 5 As we shall see, the future of this route remains unclear, but it already meets fierce opposition from corporations, business organizations, and significant elements in the American legal and political establishment. Another example of corporate safeguarding against legalizing social responsibilities was evident in the reaction of multinational pharmaceutical companies to charges that the pricing policies of patented HIV drugs had constituted a serious impediment to the ability of the South African government to combat the AIDS epidemic and to the population's access to drugs. Facing mounting popular pressures, many pharmaceutical companies were quick to announce a host of philanthropic campaigns for the free distribution of drugs to selected populations in South Africa and a variety of socially responsible projects. For example, Merck announced that it was lowering its prices for the company's two antiretroviral medicines used to treat HIV infections. "At these new prices," the company's notice said, "Merck will not profit from the sale of these medicines in the developing world." Merck stated that its goal was to "spur efforts to accelerate access to these life-saving medications" and that it was Merck's third major initiative in less than a year regarding access to HIV!AIDS medicine in Africa. 6 Likewise, Pfizer offered to give away Diflucan, an expensive AIDS drug, to poor South Africans as part of its policy of responding to the "unmet medical need" in the country. 7

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Yet at the very same time, these companies launched a fierce legal struggle against a new South African law that allowed for the importation of significantly cheaper generic HIV drugs. Underlying the South African dispute was the attempt of the pharmaceutical industry to preserve the boundary separating legally protected business interests from voluntary practices of business social responsibility. The strategy pursued by the pharmaceutical companies was to disengage the dispute from the question of cost and to ground it in principled constitutional questions. The companies thus argued that the dispute was not about the relationship between the cost and the unavailability of medicines to large portions of the population. Rather, it was over the constitutionality of the legislative means chosen by the government-means that amounted to a serious infringement of their property rights. It was only when the strategy failed, due to a well-organized activists' campaign inside and outside the court, that the pharmaceutical companies withdrew their case. 8 The CSR field as it currently operates is firmly based on a voluntary and selfregulatory orientation. Corporations and trade associations try to ensure that CSR will remain outside the formal domain of law. Above and beyond the variance among social responsibility schemes and displays, they all share a voluntary approach, and they are all based on principles of nonenforceability. The grounding of this particular meaning of responsibility as voluntary and unenforceable is aided and legitimized by theories, studies, professional conceptions, and policymaking approaches that, however diverse in purpose and aspirations, agree on the fundamental failure of the state-centered "command and control" mode of regulation. New models of regulation are thus based on soft-law approaches, metaregulation, responsive regulation, private regulation, or self-regulation, all reconfiguring the regulative role of the state and steering it toward, at best, governing at a distance. The mechanics of the process are based on the decentering of the regulative role of the state, reconfiguring it as a facilitator of a multistakeholder approach to regulation, and involving civic and commercial players alongside state-based organs and international bodies. The governing technologies that are launched, in turn, are based on dialogical persuasion, willing cooperation, internalized commitment, and even moral sensibilities. This logic of responsibilizing nonstate actors to willingly assume tasks formerly performed by state organs- often coded as "governance"neatly fits the voluntary approach to CSR. Within this paradigm, the corporation is best driven to perform social responsibilities when it is exposed to consumer

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and investor demands; engages in dialogue with civic groups, communities, and private authorities; and learns to transform CSR into a corporate asset (e.g., reputation, employee satisfaction, competitive advantage, or risk-management strategy).

On Humanitarianism For purposes of the ensuing discussion, catastrophes are conceptualized here not only as grand spectacles of destruction, devastation, and suffering, blocking the way to progress; they also promote and enhance new global orders of governance. The uTImanageability of some natural and human-made disasters and the pain they inflict on a large number of civilians send shockwaves throughout the social, economic and political fabric at the local, regional, national, and transnationallevels. Responses are called for. A sense of moral emergency is aroused. Responsibilities are negotiated and assigned. Sovereignty is challenged. Root causes are being explored. Solutions are offered. A host of experts and volunteers, governmental and non-governmental organizations, civilians and armed forces, are spread over the catastrophic terrain. Communities are targeted for reconstruction. Above all, the very understanding of and reaction to catastrophes activate a moral test in which changing perceptions of moral responsibility are being played out. 9

Following this conceptualization, the argument here is that basic (albeit contested) principles of humanitarianism-namely, wide-scale assistance efforts targeting victims of catastrophes-are by and large based on the compassion and voluntary readiness of free-willing agents to act in the face of distant suffering. To a large extent, notwithstanding the dictates of international humanitarian law at times of war, humanitarianism matured and developed outside the domain of law. The duty to act is moral, and even when this morality is coupled with utilitarian reasoning, it still insists on its autonomy from binding legal duties. To some extent, legal codification is treated as if it contaminates and robs that morality of its political disinterestedness. The positioning ofhumanitarianism outside the domain oflaw is also related to the fact that both national and international legislation are by and large state centered and aim at the protection of national sovereignty. Humanitarian intervention, even when it is carried out with the consent of the host government (let alone when it isn't), necessarily infringes on sovereignty, real and symbolic. In this sense, the perceived moral duty of humanitarian intervention works against states. In contrast to social rights that connect human and citizen rights, humanitarianism

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works to "separate the status ofbeing human from the status of citizenship," in fact allowing for a new universalizing principle to set the conditions for social action. 10 Partially to alleviate this inherent tension, the dominant blueprint ofhumanitarian action (at least until recent years) has been characterized by strong commitments to principles of impartiality, neutrality, and confidentiality, most notably demonstrated in the model operations of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). That is, humanitarianism is positioned not simply outside law but also outside politics, abstaining from coupling pity with justice, relief with obligatory responsibility, and aid with the search for the root causes behind a catastrophe. Not least significant is the fact that humanitarianism is squarely positioned on the side of"relief" in the commonly used relief-development distinction. Aspiring to conceptualize two distinct ways of addressing human want, relief is generally perceived as the short-term or emergency supply of vital commodities and services to victims of a catastrophe. Development is understood as a longer term investment process that enables chronically marginalized communities to enjoy enhanced physical and material prospects for self-reliance. Development is assumed to expand economic productivity and to affect social organization and political power, whereas relief is designed to alleviate immediate and tangible sufferingY Development is thus inherently tied to broader economic and political concerns (planning, investment, policies, international contracting, joint ventures, etc.), whereas relief is presumably secured precisely through its disengagement from such broader aspects of the political economy. Relief, and the humanitarian gesture within it, is thus also structurally located as the performance of an imagined universal civil society: spontaneous, voluntary, morally inspired, solidarity oriented, and politically neutral. Unlike development efforts that imply political choices, writes Senarclens, charity-based humanitarian relief impartially "mobilizes emotions rather than political reflection." 12 Indeed, the tremendously vigorous and rapid expansion of humanitarianism in the last quarter of the twentieth century is a vital element in the overall ascendance of neoliberalism as a dominant ideological regime. The neoliberal framework is not only about free trade, self-regulation of markets, and the privatization of state services. It is also about a perceived role for civil society as a generator of social activities rooted in notions of spontaneity, solidarity, and altruism. Conjuring images of charity events, civic associations, and good citizenship, civil society has become a "channel for the diffusion of neo liberal norms." 13 Projected as the embodiment of public moral sentiments that bind humans together, civil society

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is perceived as a locus of spontaneous action based on individual initiative and of collective organization on a voluntary basis apart from state, law, and commercial interests. Conceptualized by neoliberals in terms of a sociallaissez-faire doctrine, the concept of civil society is thus recruited as "a substitute for the state, taking over functions like welfare or humanitarian assistance." 14 In concrete terms, this also means that the ascendance of humanitarianism is coupled with the proliferation ofnongovernmental organizations (voluntary "civil society" associations) as primary agents of humanitarianism. Thus, the self-regulation of markets on the one hand and spontaneous civil action toward victims of catastrophes on the other hand have become the double bind of a neoliberal framework that works to depoliticize and hence situate both CSR and humanitarianism outside the domain of law and within the firm grip of the domain of civic virtue. However, not unlike struggles taking place within the field of CSR, there has also been an enhanced debate about the prospects oflegalizing and politicizing humanitarian interventions in recent years. Bernard Kouchner, founder of Medicins Sans Frontieres (MSF), has been a pioneer in calling for transcending the heretofore apolitical humanitarian model and for bringing together humanitarianism and politics. MSF, winner of the 1999 Nobel prize for peace, has begun to integrate its commitment to providing medical care with an advocacy approach that emphasizes the duty of "bearing witness and speaking out": speaking out against human rights abuses and violations of international humanitarian law that its teams witness while providing medical relief. Specifically, MSF defines its mission as "rebellious humanitarianism"; namely, it does not see its mission merely in terms of "doing good." Rather, rebellious humanitarianism means political engagement in the sense of taking an active role in the actual definition or redefinition of situations as disastrous or catastrophic, defining situations in terms of human rights abuses, and defining situations in terms of those responsible. The approach advocated by MSF culminates in the idea of pressing the United Nations and other global organizations to recognize a right to humanitarian intervention that would legalize a limit to national sovereignty and, when needed, legitimize forced intervention. 15 No doubt, the idea of overriding state sovereignty in defense of human rights marks a conceptual break with a state-centered approach and represents a move toward conceiving armed humanitarian intervention as international law enforcement. Michael Walzer articulates the emerging new conception of obligatory humanitarian intervention as follows: Humanitarian intervention has so far been essentially based on the paradigm of philanthropy, thereby

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voluntarily addressing the needs of victims. However, a shift of paradigm is needed, mediated through the language of human rights, stressing the rights (rather than needs) of victims to have their human rights protected and enforced. 16 However, the legalization of armed humanitarian intervention opens up a plethora of new dilemmas. Humanitarianism can be appropriated as the ideology of rich states, enhancing their world position and providing legitimacy for military interventions prompted by strategic geopolitical considerations. 17 As Mamdani reminds us, there can be no such thing as an unambiguous humanitarian intervention.18 Every intervention in the future will serve a complex of interests as much as every imperial intervention in the past also claimed to be humanitarian. Calling an intervention "humanitarian," in short, cannot strip it of its politics. Still, those in favor oflegalizing humanitarian intervention are doing so precisely in the name of coupling humanitarianism and politics, albeit arguing for a higher form of politics-namely, that of international law enforcement sanctioned by accountable international bodies. 19 Not unrelated to the question of politicizing and legalizing humanitarianism, there has been a recent effort to transcend the relief-development divide and to free humanitarianism from its firm positioning as a relief platform alone. For example, it has been argued that relief operations create a dependence relationship between donors and recipients, reinforce structural constraints to development, perpetuate ethnic strife and armed conflicts, and function as a poor and episodic substitute for long-term investments. 20 Moreover, it has been argued that the current form of humanitarian relief, undertaken almost exclusively by nongovernmental organizations, relieves rich governments from the need to search and identify the root causes for catastrophes and from the duty to mobilize the resources that may be generated to tackle such causes. In the words of one observer, "It is not rare for a refugee to get more food aid and protection than the ('simply starving') population in surrounding villages." 21 Not unlike concurrent developments in the field of CSR, efforts to create new legal norms for humanitarian intervention, and efforts to transcend the relief-development divide by means of novel forms of global regulation, are so far unsuccessful. First, principles of sovereignty still dominate international law, and the willingness to compromise them is slow to emerge. Second, rich states are extremely reluctant to commit human and material resources for universal causes disengaged from their concrete strategic interests. Under such circumstances, the "right" to deploy armed humanitarian intervention remains, at this point at least, the prerogative of powerful states that

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use (or some would say abuse) the humanitarian cause on a highly selective basis. As the latest U.S. led war in Iraq so clearly showed, humanitarian intervention can easily become a trope for violating international law in the name of a higher moral duty rather than an opportunity for validating a truly global regime of human rights.

On Humanitarianism and Corporate Social Responsibility It is through their assigned locations within the neoliberal conceptual framework

of the relationship among states, markets, and civil society that we can appreciate the striking similarity between prevalent practices of humanitarianism and contemporary corporate-inspired notions of social responsibility. Both humanitarianism and corporate social responsibility are technologies of intervention that have been constituted around principles of "metacharity." Both these technologies of intervention tend to operate "outside the law" and to emphasize voluntary action and goodwill alone. Both, albeit with different histories and orientations, are children of the neoliberal version of civil society. The emergence ofhumanitarianism as a major venue of disaster relief strongly corresponds to the neoliberal ideology of constituting a "free society" on the pillars of the voluntary and spontaneous action of responsible individuals. From this perspective, we can appreciate the typical reliance ofhumanitarianism on voluntary nongovernmental organizations and on the typical delivery of relief on a no-fault basis that strictly adheres to principles of neutrality. Corporate social responsibility, on its part, is a direct consequence of the shifting relations between markets and states. Multinational corporations, widely conceived as the primary beneficiaries of the neoliberal global order, are increasingly expected to assume social tasks that heretofore fell on the shoulders of national governments. The emergent new discourse of corporate social responsibility addresses the moral duty of corporations to act as "good citizens," to adhere to labor and environmental standards, and to contribute to the development and well-being oflocal communities and indigenous populations according to the neoliberal agenda of relieving governments from a host of similar responsibilities. That is, the spread of neoliberalism as a dominant blueprint of governance expresses itself in voluntary displays of corporate responsibility "in civil society" that function as a substitute for formal laws and regulations. Yet as mentioned earlier, both CSR and humanitarianism are also sites of concrete and conceptual struggles. Corporate social responsibility is envisioned by

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some as an opening for a future global regime of enforceable rules shaping corporate governance and as a pretext for the emergence of legally protected norms of social responsibility. At least some confrontational nongovernmental organizations and activist groups try to couple corporate social responsibility with legal responsibility and to translate corporate responsibility into the language ofblaming and claiming. Humanitarianism, on its part, is also undergoing some serious rethinking, as new calls for its politicization, legalization, and release from its charitable relief entrapment are increasingly heard. Having established the structural homology between humanitarianism and CSR as two types of metacharity operating within the neoliberal framework, and having outlined some ideas about the need to relocate both CSR and humanitarianism within the formal domain oflaw, we can now consider the possible interface between the two. Therefore, we may ask: How may we conceive the actual and potential obligatory role of MNCs in alleviating or preventing distant suffering? In spite of the principled correspondence between humanitarianism and CSR as charity-based forms of social giving, and in spite of the growing recognition that MNCs play an increasingly significant political and social role in world events, little attention has been given to this question. To date, most discussions of humanitarianism relate to states and member-state organizations on the one hand and to nongovernmental organizations on the other hand. Most discussions of CSR almost consistently avoid the question of catastrophes. To some extent, this lack of discussion may simply reflect an assumption that the role ofMNCs in catastrophes is in perfect accord with their routine charity-based campaigns. From this perspective, we may not expect MNCs to go beyond contributing to emergency relief efforts on a sporadic basis. However, this lack of discussion may also be revealing in terms of the distinction between relief and development. Conceived primarily as economic entities, corporations are associated with activities relevant for development projects much more than for emergency relief operations. As we shall see in the next section, the persistence of this conceptual divide paradoxically relieves corporations from any special humanitarian input save for the aforementioned displays of goodwill donations.

The Business Humanitarian Forum: A New Market-Society Blueprint? The Business Humanitarian Forum (BHF) represents a novel attempt to introduce MNCs to humanitarianism. Launched in Geneva in January 1999, BHP's purpose

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is "to encourage dialogue and mutual support between the business and humanitarian communities, based on their common interests in the stability, prosperity and democratic evolution of developing societies and countries in transition." Acknowledging that only limited channels of communication exist between business and humanitarian organizations, BHF was founded by a group of corporate executives (e.g., Merck, Pfizer, Nestle, Shell, Mobile, and Unocal) and humanitarian actors (e.g., Care USA, ICRC, and some former officials of UN relief agencies). BHF also established a formal partnership with the United Nations Development Program (UNDP). BHF's model of cooperation merits some consideration. The model consists of four stages, each containing explicit and implicit assumptions about the very meaning of catastrophes, about victims of catastrophes, about the nature of humanitarianism, and about corporate responsibility. The model's point of departure treats a catastrophic event as a "disturbance" that affects, in this order, humanitarian organizations, business groups, and "people in the region." In the first stage, the catastrophe interrupts the ongoing development of a society because the destroyed infrastructure also means that "normal business operations and investment are impeded or completely stopped." The second stage exists immediately after the crisis strikes, when "humanitarian organizations intervene to help the affected community cope with the situation through emergency assistance involving food, medicine, shelter and other supplies." The third stage is intermediary. It describes an assumed phase when emergency relief exhausts itself and humanitarian organizations "seek to stabilize the society and restart the development process. Business becomes interested in resuming normal activity but hesitates to do so." It is not exactly clear from the model what brings this phase to an end. A fourth stage is launched, however, when "the affected community recovers enough to resume normal social and economic development." At this point, humanitarian organizations begin to leave and are supposedly replaced by the development programs of various bilateral and multilateral aid agencies. At this stage, according to the model, "multinational corporations can assist the local community through resumption of investment and business development." 22 It is noteworthy that the victim population has almost no role in this model. Recovery is a function of passive acceptance of relief, and resumption of "normality" results from external factors. The model also strictly observes the reliefdevelopment divide in terms of both social organization and temporality. BHF states that as "the role and influence of governments continue to decline, business

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is becoming an actor in new fields." Accordingly, and to facilitate the needs of humanitarian organizations, MNCs may offer money and contribute their "pragmatic thinking, expertise and technology transfer, as well as practical assistance during crises when business can respond with less red tape [than governments]." The model thus explicitly ties MNCs to relief efforts through the idea of corporate social responsibility in its charity-oriented version, stating that such assistance will serve as an updated display of responsibility because "corporate citizenship has evolved over the last two decades from occasional philanthropic contributions to a more systematic and focused approach." The CSR model that is here tied to humanitarianism is also explicitly utilitarian, applying an instrumental rationality to humanitarian intervention. BHF states that "multinational corporations can achieve a strategic business benefit through humanitarian activities. This is part of the rationale behind corporate social responsibility or corporate citizenship." Linking CSR to humanitarianism, according to BHF, "can provide clear business advantages": Above and beyond their direct investments that are endangered by a catastrophe, MNCs depend in part on the local workforce, local businesses, and host country leaders. Therefore, "multinational corporations can have very direct incentives for supporting the relief efforts of humanitarian organizations." Further, BHF states that displays of corporate citizenship in the form of helping humanitarian organizations are rational because MNCs rely on them to "stabilize societies and make long-term investments possible." Situating humanitarian organizations squarely on the side of "relief" and offering charity-based corporate assistance to such relief efforts, the BHF model also squarely locates MNCs on the side of "development" in its most traditional sense-namely, investment, generation of revenues, and, at best, facilitating new jobs and economic opportunities. The model assumes that renewed corporate activity in and of itself launches a process of development and that this process, in turn, enhances the self-reliance of the population. However, we now know that development approaches often overlook long-term sustainability concerns and are driven by a search for quick profits. Thus, development projects rely on the stronger elements in society, often bypassing the poorest and most needy. Moreover, development projects are often undertaken by foreign experts and involve little effort to train the local workforce and engage in technology transfer. Indeed, when we take a closer look at the model that BHF offers, we see that once development by MNCs is considered, the operational rationale clearly changes from that of business responsibility to that of business opportunity.

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The partnership model of BHP also assumes a temporal linearity according to which MNCs suspend commercial activities when a catastrophe strikes, offer charity-based support for humanitarian organizations until the society is "stabilized," and only resume operations after significant recovery has already been achieved. The problem with this model, however, is that a catastrophe is rarely a single event at a single moment in time. Rather than following clear progressive stages, a catastrophe is a complex process in the course of which the lines between relief and development are constantly blurred, and progression and regression are interchangeable. For example, it is now widely acknowledged that famines are not the result of natural causes alone. The natural-social divide in general is seriously challenged by latter-day students of disasters. 23 The dissolution of this distinction is crucial because when social causes contribute to catastrophes, there are more reasons to actively protect and enforce victims' human rights. Accordingly, famines are now treated as a prototypical example of a complex humanitarian crisis. Food shortages and crop failures, the immediate causes for widespread hunger, are often caused by war, mass deportations and forced displacements, politics of food distribution, unavailability of foreign relief supplies, corruption, failed infrastructures, and human-made desertification. Development projects in which foreign entities collaborate with corrupt or abusive regimes also contribute to the complexities of famine as they sometimes trigger or enable forced displacements, the destruction of agriculture, and the abuse of material resources for furthering hostile political agendas. Humanitarian efforts often reveal these complexities. Whether humanitarian aid is delivered through international bodies like the United Nations, specific national governments, or nongovernmental agencies, the availability of food and its methods of allocation depend on the local government, on its conception of the degree to which humanitarian intervention infringes upon sovereignty, on the ability of the interventionist bodies to enjoy a supportive political infrastructure, and on the relationship between ruling elites and MNCs that operate in the country. Finally, BHP mentions that the involvement of MNCs in some countries' local politics "had a serious negative impact on the local humanitarian situation." But this passing reference does not lead to any substantive discussion about the potential contribution of MNCs to catastrophes and about the potential ability of MNCs to prevent catastrophes before they occur. Now, at least since the catastrophic results of Union Carbide's operations in Bhopal, it may amount to a truism to discuss the potential direct responsibility of corporations to mass disasters.

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In what follows, therefore, I do not discuss such risky potentials but rather focus on situations in which corporate responsibilities for catastrophes or for their prevention are indirect and silent. To illustrate, let us turn back to Talisman Energy Inc., whose social responsibility report was briefly introduced in the beginning of this chapter, and discuss some of its activities and their consequences in Sudan.

Oil, Famine, and Law A civil war has persisted in Sudan since the 1980s. Rebel armies in southern Sudan have been fighting Sudanese government forces and progovernment militias in a bid for political autonomy for Sudan's primarily Christian population of 5 million. Violent ethnic and military divisions among southerners have further complicated the civil war and worsened the plight of the local population. Over the years, and coupled with serious droughts, the civil war has created mass population displacements, leading to serious food shortages and widespread famines in 1988, 1992, and 1998. Throughout, food has been used as a weapon by both government and rebel forces. Various independent studies concluded that, over the years, government officials have placed tight controls on aid deliveries, often blocking food shipments to needy populations, while many rebel commanders regularly have confiscated a percentage of food relief distributed in the south. It was also established that the Sudanese government had sold grain reserves to fuel their military, while refusing to declare a food emergency and to allow relief into starving opposition areas. Both government and opposition forces created famine as a tool to control territories and populations and restricted access to food aid (often by attacking relief convoys) as an instrument of ethnic and religious oppression. 24 One of the conflict areas is southern Sudan's Upper Nile province. Mass displacements, gross violations of human rights, and ensuing hunger in the Upper Nile province were directly related to clashes around the region's vast and largely unexploited oil fields. The oil fields in Western Upper Nile are crucial to the government's ability to generate revenues. In 1998, construction was completed on the pipeline to carry the crude oil to refineries in the north, provoking the resistance of southerners who saw this oil as their property and who considered the government's reliance on oil revenues a prime factor enabling it to persist in the war. Ever since, as several reports indicate, the government has pursued a "scorched earth" policy to clear the land of civilians and to make way for the exploration and exploitation of oil by foreign oil companies. Subsequently, it is claimed that the Sudanese

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government's revenues from oil have enabled it to double its military expenditures in 2001 compared to 1998. Another report thus claims: That this fabulous potential for oil wealth exists side by side with a famine that affects more than 150,000 people in Western Upper Nile is no accident. It is the consequence of government desire to establish control over the area by using militias (since 1983) to loot and attack and displace the local population. The 1998 Western Upper Nile famine has been largely the product of unrestrained attacks on the civilian population by two pro-government militias. 25

Sudan's oil production and sales have been undertaken by a consortium of multinational oil companies that was put in charge of the $1.6 billion oil development scheme. In 1998, Talisman became a major player in the consortium. Subsequently, Talisman reported that the Sudan operations generated a pretax income of Can$310 million in 2002, up from Can$210 million in 2001. A 2001 report by Corporate Watch claimed that the participation of Talisman in the consortium was particularly significant not only because it provided the technical expertise needed to build a new 900-mile pipeline to Port Sudan on the Red Sea but also because it carried the stature of a Western oil firm. There seems to be no dispute over the fact that as late as 2002, the Upper Nile region had been a hunger zone. Reports from UN agencies, the World Food Program, and the U.S. Committee for Refugees all shared grave concerns about the humanitarian disaster in the region. What seems to be disputed is tlle complicity of the oil companies in facilitating the ongoing catastrophe. As mentioned, one common argument is that tlle revenues from the development of the oil fields and oil pipelines prolong the war and increase the likelihood of recurring famines. It is also argued that the Sudanese government divided the south into a web of oil concessions, provoking the turning of each bloc into a potential battlefield because the development projects in the oil fields are premised on mass displacements that both fuel hostilities and create acute food shortages. Even more concretely, critics argued that the oil companies operating in Sudan were complicit in displacements and in other human rights violations due to their involvement in the government's operations. It has been argued that the companies allowed the government forces that were assigned to protect them to use their airstrips and roads to displace people and to commit a variety of war crimes. Thus, although Sudan has largely been perceived as a chronic disaster area that merited humanitarian assistance, the focus on oil production activities profoundly influenced the way the Sudanese catastrophe was perceived. The shifting

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of the gaze extricated the issue from the encompassing universe of humanitarian relief and moved it into the universe of rebellious humanitarianism: a technology of intervention that-while constantly professionalizing the alleviation of suffering-seeks to uncover the political and economic roots of catastrophes and to mobilize the resources needed to remove them. Within this context, attention is drawn to the role of multinational corporations in creating, directly or indirectly, conditions of suffering. The emerging discourse and practice of corporate social responsibility-based on the widespread understanding that some MNCs currently enjoy policy-shaping powers that match and often surpass that of national governments-further facilitate this conceptual shifting of the gaze. The focus on Talisman is therefore interesting because, whether it is the charity-oriented nature of humanitarianism or the charity-oriented nature of CSR that is challenged, this focus is at the same time a call for bringing both into the domain oflegal obligations. In the Talisman case, humanitarianism and CSR converge through the language of human rights and the universal obligation to protect them. The Talisman case, in this respect, allows us to begin asking questions about the type and scope of duties that corporations may be expected to follow in catastrophic situations. Further, it allows us to ask what type of legal tools should be available when corporations fail to adhere to such duties. Not surprisingly, the oil companies in general and Talisman in particular have fiercely denied allegations of wrongdoing while trying to preserve the line between charitable actions and legal obligations. Talisman argued that the oil fields it operated had been vacant of civilian populations before it entered the area and that, rather than exacerbating the conflict, it had made a considerable contribution to peace efforts. Launching a vigorous corporate responsibility campaign, Talisman pointed to the modern infrastructure it built for the local population: new water wells, schools, clinics, and a well-equipped hospital that included an operating room and a neonatal unit. As mentioned in the opening section of this chapter, Talisman reported a host of community programs taking place in Sudan, small business initiatives, educational programs, and active involvement in peace efforts initiatives. The president and CEO of Talisman had declared in October 2002 that Talisman's presence in Sudan has been a force for good and we have taken steps to ensure that the benefits created through our involvement will continue to improve the lives of the people of Sudan both now and in the future. Talisman and its employees have made significant contributions to this end over these past four years, providing medical assistance, shelter, clean water, vocational training and initiating capacity-building programs. 26

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Finally, Talisman has repeatedly declared that its policies in Sudan promoted and protected human rights because they were based on the principles of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Unconvinced critics included a number ofhuman rights, religious, and hum anitarian organizations. From a theoretical point of view, these critics fused humanitarian concerns with expectations of corporate social responsibility, invoking the language of human rights as a political and legal medium. In the case of Sudan, according to this logic, corporate social responsibility amounted to no less than complete operational withdrawal as a means for alleviating or at least preventing further catastrophic results. In practical terms, this fusion relied on an effort to bring both CSR and humanitarianism into the domain oflaw. Thus, apart from a general moral shaming campaign, critics mobilized economic and legal pressure aimed at forcing Talisman to withdraw from Sudan. Economic pressure was in the form of a vast divestment campaign, mainly addressing Canadian and U.S. shareholders. The divestment campaign was initially aimed at the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan, Talisman's largest investor. Accordingly, the executive board of the Ontario Teachers Federation-the umbrella organization for Ontario's 144,000 teachers-has asked the Ontario Teachers' Pension Fund to sell its holdings in the company. In early 2000, the state of New Jersey Finance Board announced that it had sold all its 68o,ooo shares in Talisman. The General Assembly Council of the Presbyterian Church (USA) approved a recommendation from the National Ministries Division Committee to add Talisman to the denomination's divestment list, barring church entities from owning stock in the company. By mid-2ooo, one report noted that several important investors had already pulled out, including the state ofN ew Jersey, the New York City Pension Fund, the California Public Employees' Retirement Fund, the Texas Teachers' Retirement Fund, TIAA-CREEF Investment, and Investors Group Investment Management. 27 And in 2001, the pension committee of the Anglican Church of Canada also began to divest its holdings in Talisman. On the legal front, Talisman had been challenged and warned by the International Centre for Human Rights and Democratic Development (Rights & Democracy), a Canadian nonprofit organization. At a news conference in 2002, Rights & Democracy warned Talisman that future complicity in Sudanese human rights abuses could make it liable for prosecution by the newly established International Criminal Court. Rights & Democracy further argued that although the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court excluded "legal persons" (e.g., corporations) from being tried under its jurisdiction, corporate executives who facili-

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tated, aided, or abetted a crime covered by the court might be criminally liable. It argued that after entering into effect in July 2002, crimes committed by state agents or nationals of states that have ratified the statute will be liable for prosecution. Canada, it reminded Talisman, was one of the sixty-six countries to have ratified the Rome Statute and incorporated it into Canadian law, which means that such suspects could also be tried in Canadian courts.Z8 Even more significantly, in November 2001, the Presbyterian Church of Sudan, aided by lawyers and activists in Canada and the United States, had filed a class-action suit against Talisman in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. 29 Plaintiffs argued that defendants have collaborated with the Sudanese government in a joint strategy to deploy military forces in a brutal ethnic cleansing campaign against the civilian population "for the purpose of enhancing defendants ability to explore and extract oil from areas of southern Sudan by creating a cordon sanitaire surrounding the oil concessions located there." Plaintiffs further argued that the armed campaign was made possible through government utilization of vehicles, helicopters, aircraft, roads, and airstrips owned, chartered, constructed, or maintained by Talisman. Plaintiffs accused Talisman of keeping a blind eye to military operations that relied on Talisman's resources and were done in the name of protecting the oil fields. These military operations resulted in severe violations of human rights and obligatory norms of customary international law, including killings, rape and torture amounting to genocide, ethnic cleansing and the displacement of more than 100,000 people, vast destruction of property and crops, and the deliberate obstruction of health and food distribution undertaken by humanitarian organizations. Plaintiffs asked the court to declare that Talisman violated international human rights law, to issue an injunction restraining it from continuing cooperation with the Sudanese government, and to establish compensatory and punitive damages. 30 The claim against Talisman is still pending, but it should be noted that there is mounting pressure in the United States to prevent the use of national legislation for suing MNCs, and the future of using American courts as a means for holding MNCs accountable for human rights violations remains highly uncertain. Responding to the legal and nonlegal pressure to which it had been subjected, Talisman announced in early 2003 that it sold its interests in the Greater Nile Oil Project to an Indian corporation for approximately U.S.$771 million. In the next and final section of this chapter, I briefly discuss the potential meaning of-and the future prospects of_:_invoking the law as a means for tackling the role of corporations in complex humanitarian disasters of the type discussed here.

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Conclusion International law treats complex humanitarian catastrophes largely through a human rights perspective. It is the violation of human rights that is currently invoked to justify humanitarian intervention and to identify perpetrators who violate them. Hunger itself is considered a human rights issue in humanitarian covenants that provide for feeding civil populations during wars. International legal instruments, such as the International Conference on Nutrition World Declaration and Plan of Action for Nutrition (1992) and the Vienna Declaration on Human Rights (1993), support the principle that food should never be used as a political tool and that hunger should never serve as a weapon. They provide a reference point and standard for action for the United Nations, its member states, and its agencies. The second, third, and fourth Geneva Conventions (1949) and Additional Protocols (1977) also provide international guidelines to combatant parties for meeting essential humanitarian needs and ensuring basic subsistence rights of civilian populations experiencing armed conflict. All these legal norms follow the human rights principles expressed in the UN Charter and Universal Declaration of Human Rights that treat food as a basic human right and as a principal component of the universal human right to life. The international law of human rights is therefore also the primary venue in the effort to transform the heretofore voluntary and nonbinding obligations ofMNCs in the general field of CSR and in the specific area of humanitarian catastrophes into enforceable forms oflegal accountability. However, international law mainly addresses the duties of governments, and MNCs have so far remained outside contemporary debates. Only in recent years, to some degree, have prominent jurists taken up the task of trying to create a new architecture of domestic and internationallaw addressing the human rights obligations of multinational corporations.31 Thus, the legal action against Talisman must be understood as one element in a wide spectrum of attempts to tame corporate behavior by inventing new global regulatory regimes that would also address the potential obligations of MNCs to alleviate suffering and to assume active humanitarian duties. 32 The resistance of corporations to the use of binding legal obligations, on the other hand, must be correspondingly understood as an element in corporate attempts to locate CSR (including humanitarian responses to catastrophes) within the voluntary domain. Indeed, throughout this chapter, I tried to show that both technologies of intervention-CSR and humanitarianism-neatly correspond with the ascen-

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dance of neoliberalism. Both nurture an ideal civil society that assumes voluntary and spontaneous actions for correcting social wrongs, while relieving governments and markets from assuming legally binding duties. Both CSR and the ideology of the new humanitarianism, as Chimni puts it, seek "to legitimize and sustain an international system that tolerates an unbelievable divide not only between the North and the South but also inside them." 33 Out of this conjectural relationship between CSR and humanitarianism, an inquiry as to the role of MNCs in catastrophes must be rethought. As we have seen, new demands for legalizing and for establishing a right to humanitarian intervention have been firmly placed on the international agenda in recent years. Still, most attention is given to the actions of states. Yet isn't it time to begin to think, even prior to armed humanitarian intervention, about creating a legal framework for sanctioning corporate humanitarian intervention? In fact, although intervention may be a humanitarian instrument for governments, the act of withdrawal-the practice of "mis-intervention"-may become the appropriate humanitarian instrument when it comes to corporations. Often well ahead of foreign countries in terms of access, resources, and connections with relevant agents in disaster-stricken areas, MNCs are in an increasingly strategic position to anticipate and prevent catastrophes and to contribute to their alleviation in many host countries. The duties of MNCs that operate in such areas must therefore be urgently addressed. Thus, by speaking about corporate humanitarian intervention and withdrawal, we may begin to imagine the articulation of active corporate duties to intervene in the course of catastrophic events (1) by barring host governments from using corporate facilities and know-how, (2) by requiring host governments to enter into enforceable security protocols that may be independently monitored as a condition for investment and development projects, and, when necessary, (3) by pulling out and suspending operations in areas where they exacerbate catastrophic conflicts. Current debates about humanitarian intervention still almost entirely avoid these issues. As we have seen, this may be due to the fact that when it comes to corporations, both CSR and humanitarianism are still by and large conceived, projected, and advocated as the nonbinding affairs that civil society may and should promote without the assistance of formal law.

Notes 1. Ronen Shamir, "The De-Radicalization of Corporate Social Responsibility," Critical Sociology 30, no. 3 (2004), 669; Ronen Shamir, "Mind the Gap: The Commodification of

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Corporate Social Responsibility," Symbolic Interaction 28, no. 2 (2005), 229; Ronen Shamir, "Corporate Social Responsibility: A Case of Hegemony and Counter-Hegemony," in Law and Globalization from Below: Towards a Cosmopolitan Legality, Boaventura de Sousa Santos

and Cesar A. Rodriguez, eds. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005); David Vogel, The Market for Virtue: The Potential and Limits of Corporate Social Responsibility (New York: Brookings Institute Press, 2005). 2. Morton Winston, "NGO Strategies for Promoting Corporate Social Responsibility," Ethics and International Affairs 16, no. 1 (2002), 71.

3. Pall A. Davidsson, "Legal Enforcement of Corporate Social Responsibility Within the EU," Columbia Journal of European Law 8 (Summer 2002), 529. 4. Andrew Clapham, "The Question of Jurisdiction Under International Criminal Law over Legal Persons: Lessons from the Rome Conference on an International Criminal Court," in Liability of Multinational Corporations Under International Law, Menno T. Kamminga and Saman Zia-Zarifi, eds. (The Hague: Kluwer Law International, 2000 ). 5· Sara Joseph, Corporations and Transnational Human Rights Litigation (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2004); Ronen Shamir, "Between Self-Regulation and the Alien Tort Claims Act: On the Contested Concept of Corporate Social Responsibility," Law and Society Review 38, no. 4 (2004), 635. 6. Merck press release, March 7, 2001, www.merck.com. 7. Associated Press, March 4, 2000, www.FreeRepublic.com. 8. Ronen Shamir, "Corporate Responsibility and the South African Drug Wars: Outline of a New Frontier for Cause Lawyers," in The World Cause Lawyers Make: Structure and Agency in Legal Practice, Austin Sarat and Stuart Scheingold, eds. (Stanford, CA: Stanford

University Press, 2004). 9· Adi Ophir, "Moral Technologies: Managing Disasters and Forsaking Life," Theory and Criticism 22 (2003), 67 (Hebrew). 10.

Luc Boltanski, Distant Suffering: Morality, Media and Politics (Cambridge: Cam-

bridge University Press, 1999), 191. 11.

Jerry Buckland, "From Relief and Development to Assisted Self-Reliance: Nongov-

ernmental Organizations in Bangladesh," Journal ofHumanitarian Assistance (1999 ), http:// www.jha.ac /articles /ao52.htm. 12. Pierre Senarclens, "Neo Liberalism and Humanitarianism," unpublished paper presented at the Law and Catastrophe Workshop, Tel Aviv University (2003), 5· 13. Lucy Taylor, "Globalization and Civil Society- Continuities, Ambiguities and Realities in Latin America," Indiana Journal of Global Legal Issues 7, no. 1 (Autumn 1999 ), 269. 14. Mary Kaldor, "Transnational Civil Society," in Human Rights in Global Politics, Timothy Dunne and Nicholas J. Wheeler, eds. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999). 15. Boltanski, Distant Suffering, 178. 16. Michael Walzer, "Beyond Humanitarian Intervention: Human Rights in Global So-

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ciety," The Minerva Center for Human Rights, Annual Lecture Series on Human Rights, Tel Aviv University School of Law, June 16, 2004. 17. B. S. Chimni, "Globalization, Humanitarianism and the Erosion of Refugee Protection," Journal ofRefugee Studies 13, no. 3 (2001), 243. 18. Mahmood Mamdani, "Humanitarian Intervention: A Forum," The Nation, July 14, 2003. 19. Boltanski, Distant Suffering, 191. 20. Mark Duffield, "The Political Economy of Internal War: Asset Transfer, Complex Emergencies, and International Aid," in War and Hunger: Rethinking International Responses to Complex Emergencies, Joanna Macrae and Anthony Zwi, eds. (London: Zed Books, 2004). 21. Senarclens, "Neo Liberalism and Humanitarianism." 22. http://www.bhforum.ch/en/partnership/brochure_o3.cfm. 23. Amartya Sen and Jacques H. Dreze, The Political Economy ofHunger (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1995). 24. David Keen, The Benefits of Famine: A Political Economy of Famine and Relief in Southwestern Sudan, 1983-1989 (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1994). 25. The Scorched Earth: Oil and War in Sudan, Christian Aid Report, http://www .christian-aid.org.uk/indepth/o103suda/sudanoil.htm. 26. Talisman press release, "Talisman to Sell Sudan Assets for C1.2 Billion," Calgary, October 30,2002, http://www.highbeam.com/doc!IG1-132318696.html. 27. Wayne Sawtell, "Divestment Campaign Targets Talisman," Peace and Environment News, April2ooo, http://perc.ca/PEN/2ooo-o4/sawtell.html. 28. Andrew Clapham, "The Question of Jurisdiction Under International Criminal Law over Legal Persons: Lessons from the Rome Conference on an International Criminal Court," in Liability of Multinational Corporations Under International Law, Menno T. Kamminga and Saman Zia-Zarifi, eds. (The Hague: Kluwer Law International, 2ooo). Also www.corpwatch.org/bulletins /PBD.jsp?articleid = 2478; http:/ /www.ichrdd.ca. 29. Civil Action No. 01 CV 9882 [DLC]. See amended complaint at http://www .bergermontague.com/pdfs/SecondAnlendedClassActionComplaint.pdf. 30. The class-action suit was submitted under the Alien Tort Claims Act (Judiciary Act ofl789, Ch. 20, §9, 1 Stat. 73, 77,1789, currently with minor changes, 28 U.S.C. §1350, 1982). 31. Steven R. Ratner, "Corporations and Human Rights: A Theory of Legal Responsibility," Yale Law Journal m, no. 3 (2001), 443; David Kinley and Junko Tadaki, "From Talk to Walk: The Emergence of Human Rights Responsibilities for Corporations at International Law," Virginia Journal of International Law 44, no. 4 ( 2004 ), 931. 32. Ronnie Lipschutz and James K. Rowe, Globalization, Governmentality, and Global Politics: Regulation for the Rest of Us? (New York: Routledge, 2005). 33. B. S. Chimni, "Globalization, Humanitarianism and the Erosion of Refugee Protection," Journal of Refugee Studies 13, no. 3 (2001), 245.

Political Catastrophe and Liberal Legal Desire: Two Stories of Revolution, Remediation, and Return from the French Nineteenth Century SYLVIA SCHAFER

What counts as catastrophe? What kind of difference does it denote? What kind of desire has that difference awakened in relation to law? In many respects, catastrophe's range of meaning in the West has remained relatively stable since at least the late eighteenth century. In the modern era, "catastrophe" tends to be used most often to describe profoundly destructive and unexpected disasters, occasions of calamitous damage, disruption, or loss. Those who invoke or explore the sign of catastrophe have been especially concerned with the discursive separation of catastrophe from more "ordinary" devastation. In the wake of the 1995 earthquake in Kobe, for example, the World Health Organization emphasized scale in its discussion of the catastrophic. "Not all earthquakes are endowed with the dimensions of a catastrophe," the organization's press release on a 1997 meeting of experts explained. Instead, catastrophe should describe only those occasions "where the loss ofhuman life, the material damage and the destruction ofhealth and other services are such that extraordinary aid must come from outside the affected area." 1 Working along similar lines, the humanitarian group Doctors Without Borders has used "catastrophe" to describe "a sudden and relatively brief event, affecting a collectivity, injurious to people and their property." 2 Natural catastrophe, the organization's manual on "emergency care in catastrophic situations" explains in more detail, "brutally interrupts the course of daily existence. Reduced to powerlessness, plunged into distress ... the population is left without provisions, clothing, shelter or sanitation." 3 The manual affixes the term catastrophe to those human events that result in similar devastation, such as armed conflict. 4 Catastrophe is also read in its symptoms: Human victims of catastrophe, whether the event is of natural or other origin, often display exaggerated symptoms of" disaster syndrome," induding "inhibition, stupefaction, weeping, hysteria and depression." 5

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The precise delimitation of catastrophe's difference also emerges as a preoccupation of the modern "insurantial imaginary." 6 As one industry manual puts it: "[a] catastrophic loss" is best defined as "one that is a sudden, widespread, or extraordinary disaster. The two essential characteristics of a catastrophe are that it be (1) sudden and (2) widespread." 7 Like Doctors Without Borders, this text's authors contend that the "origin of catastrophes may be either human or natural. The human causes are war; invasion; civil war; insurrection; rebellion; revolution; military, naval, or usurped power; civil commotion; conspiracy, riots; strikes; and martial law. The natural causes are movements of earth, air, or water." 8 For twentieth-century insurers, catastrophe names a class of risk beyond the bounds of the ordinary policy, although not beyond the limits of insurability. 9 Thus, a recent French encyclopedia of insurance states that "catastrophic risks (risks of war or uprising; natural catastrophes; nuclear risks ... ) are in principle excluded from classic insurance coverage in all European countries." 10 Subsequent sections review catastrophe risk as it has been renegotiated in the second-tier reinsurance market. 11 Across these modern renderings, four central characteristics tend to designate catastrophe's difference. First, catastrophe demands narratives of ordinary life suddenly and brutally disrupted by the drastic event. 12 It is this use that most closely draws on the word's Greek roots, kata- and strophe, which translate literally as "down- (or over- )turning." It also descends from early modern notions of catastrophe as the plot reversal that brings a stage drama to its end, especially but not uniquely in tragedy. 13 Suddenness, however, also frequently merges with its opposite. The abruptness supposedly essential to naming the catastrophic incident often disappears into the account of those lasting and widespread effects that define eatastrophe retrospectively. The temporal moment of rupture, as the group Doctors Without Borders suggests, stretches into an apparently endless time of privation, "stupefaction," "powerlessness," and "distress." Narratives of catastrophe collapse the instant and the eternity. They extend the event toward the horizon of the future and read it as an origin in anticipation of the time that will be after the fact. 14 Modern discussions of catastrophe commonly presume an equivalence between catastrophes with "human origins," such as war and revolution, and those associated with the violence of the natural world. 15 In this regard, the imaginary space beyond that of the "ordinary" disaster is brought into view more through reflection on the analogies of devastation than on some intrinsic qualities of events in themselves. This openness to interchangeability, the subsidence of one set of tropes into another, speaks as well in the movement of figures of speech between the

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domains of natural and human catastrophe where observers struggle with the problem of representing catastrophe's difference. The figurative oscillation between the human and the natural is also increasingly evident where the explanatory power of the divine is shaken or displaced as a primary point of reference in accounts of earthly devastation. 16 The French revolution of 1848, a political and social "catastrophe" in the eyes of Alexis de Tocqueville, required the language of natural violence. The unresponsive King Louis Philippe, Tocqueville wrote, was no more than "a man awakened at night by an earthquake, who, seeing his house falling down in the darkness and even the ground giving way under his feet, remains distracted and lost amid the universal unforeseen ruin." 17 In his stress on the "unforeseen," Tocqueville employed the natural analogy to elaborate a temporal dimension for political catastrophe: Like an earthquake that strikes without warning, the sudden intrusion of the catastrophic event rudely destroys an imagined future that gives meaning to the present as its secure horizon. 18 Whether the narrative of sudden change and its aftermath is analogized to nature or not, catastrophe often serves to signify a disturbance marked by overwhelming excess. 19 This excess also challenges the limits of representation. 20 It is that which demands "extraordinary" response. It emerges in relation to risk or damage that flows beyond the limits of the normal or the acceptable. 21 Its scale and scope spill beyond expected boundaries and demand response from afar, dissolving the meaning of geopolitical borders as much in the production of horror as in the mobilization of intervention or aid. The quality of excess emerges also in those efforts to enumerate catastrophe that end with the signs of the unspoken or unspeakable, the ellipsis of a future yet to be written: "risks of war or uprising; natural catastrophes; nuclear risks ... [sic]" 22 "A twig bends until it breaks, a seed withers or germinates. An unstable compound explodes. The earth quakes. And so on." 23 At the same time that it signals crises of excess, the category of catastrophe also often accompanies stories of unimaginable deprivation. This is true not only with regard to basic sustenance and the supply of material goods but also, as Doctors Without Borders suggests in its invocation of "inhibition, stupefaction, weeping, hysteria and depression," a profound loss of self. Tocqueville's account of his own disorientation, of the sudden remaking of identities and relations, articulates a sense of catastrophe in which many more than the king are left "distracted and lost amid the universal unforeseen ruin." Although a great deal of scholarship in psychology, literary studies, and history has addressed the question of self and catastrophe through the analytical framework of memory and trauma, Tocqueville's

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emphasis on the political underscores the importance of considering catastrophic devastation to selves conceived and narrated along other discursive axes. 24 One of the most historically powerful alternative lines of imagining catastrophe and its consequences for the subject runs through the domain of law, and especially, as Tocqueville reminds us, across the ground of liberal reflection on political catastrophe, the constitution of coherent individual subjects, and the law's capacity to produce a moral, stable, and meaningful world. 25 This chapter takes up the historicity of "law and catastrophe" by exploring the problem that political events, represented and narrated as human-made catastrophes, have posed for the liberal legal imagination during the turbulent first half of the nineteenth century in France. It focuses in particular on those political catastrophes that appeared to contemporary observers to result in an unbearable disintegration or dislocation of the legally meaningful civil individual: the catastrophes of revolutionary uprising and their long aftermaths. Thinking about law and catastrophe by reading liberal discourse and the desires it evinced in the nineteenth century offers an especially useful opportunity for examining a dominant and still potent strain of Western commitment to law as a means of securing the moral and political stability that in turn predicates progress, freedom, and individual self-determination. As the greatest challenge to that stability, the event named catastrophe has unearthed liberalism's fundamental desires, not only for freedom but also for order, authority, and the purity of boundaries and categories. 26 The discursive space of catastrophe likewise reveals where liberal visions of law have been activated in especially charged ways. Catastrophe is where liberalism has argued against its own shaken certainties for a renewal of faith in law's capacity to prevent, contain, and repair the effects of catastrophic political crisis. In this space as well, the historicity of those shifting arguments and that repeatedly shaken and renewed faith comes sharply into view. Centering a discussion of catastrophe and law on historically situated visions of politics and the legal individual requires some careful thought about the analytical apposition of revolution and catastrophe. I do not bring these terms together by adopting a position of reaction or antirevolutionary repudiation, although this has of course been a common location for the discourse of revolution as morally and politically catastrophic. Rather, I write from an etymological and genealogical position that allows for more expansive reflection on stories of sudden redirections in political life and the long-lasting disturbances of identity that seem to ensue. 27 As in the case of catastrophe, readings of revolution and its effects entail

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the identification of drastic dislocations and reversals that upend a given order in unanticipated ways. "The modern notions of revolution," Hannah Arendt has famously argued, turns away from an older sense of regular, cyclical motion and instead recasts the "turning over" of revolution as an abrupt break with the past. By the end of the eighteenth century, the idea of revolution is "inextricably bound up with the notion that the course of history suddenly begins anew ... "Revolution emplots "an entirely new story" whose outcome is either "victory or disaster." 28 Revolution's representational and narrative potency as a catastrophe of human origin-as a sudden overturning that entails the collapsing of temporal, spatial, and figurative boundaries; the upending of given hierarchies; and the unbearable amalgam of loss and excess-deeply informs the work that liberalism has asked law to perform in its aftermath since the late eighteenth century, particularly in relation to the reconstruction and recalibration of the civil self. To explore the articulation of law's capacities and obligations at the beginning of this new era, I focus on two strongly charged discussions of how liberal constructions of law might mitigate political catastrophe and its long-lasting effects. Both date from the period between 1789 and 1850. The first, Honore de Balzac's Colonel Chabert, considers the problem of civil existence after the revolutionary and Napoleonic breaks with France's monarchical past. The second, a set of juristic writings on the significance of state-provided legal aid around the revolution of 1848, addresses the catastrophic consequences of a poverty that excluded individuals from seeking rectifications through civil action and, once radicalized, threatened to drive them to the barricades. Punctuated by three regime-changing uprisings-the revolutions of 1789, 1830, and 1848 -as well as by coups, large-scale protests, and periods of increasingly serious labor unrest, the first half of the French nineteenth century seemed to some observers to be in permanent confrontation with revolution. As Tocqueville put it in 1850, the episodes of revolution that had shaken France beginning in 1789 were in fact but one ongoing event, "always one and the same, through its various fortunes and passions, whose beginning our fathers saw and whose end we shall in all probability not see." 29 This period is equally significant for its place in the genealogy of liberal desire for law in the face of catastrophe. Although the tools and framework for imagining responses to catastrophe in terms of risk management were rapidly being developed, questions of danger and damage were not yet fully integrated into the episteme of insurance. 30 Nor had the individual and his or her relationship to others in times of crisis been systematically woven into actuarial narratives organized by

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probability and the distribution of risk across space, time, and populations. The first half of the French nineteenth century thus occupies an important place in the "history of the present" by showing us a past for enduring liberal investments in law that was especially fraught by "catastrophic" challenges to law's moral and political stability but not yet shaped by the late nineteenth- and twentieth-century relocation of law alongside, and sometimes within, the techniques of probability calculations and rationalized indemnification. 31 The past bears also on liberalism as a category ofhistorical and political analysis. Readers may note that not every text considered here was generated by people who would have identified themselves as liberals. Balzac's novel, the most obvious instance, is valuable not because of any avowed authorial commitment to liberal principle but rather for the way it impales certain contemporary liberal desires for law on the spikes of its trenchant critique of those longings. 32 In the first section of the chapter, then, early nineteenth-century liberal hopes for law's restorative power in the aftermath of catastrophe are systematically, and sometimes cynically, refracted through Balzac's studious illiberalism. The second section turns to the voices ofliberal thinkers and jurists more closely affiliated with what we have come to think of as liberal commitments to law, liberty, and the equality of individuals. 33 Despite France's recent history of repeated revolutionary upheaval, and even despite their own profound doubts, these men continued to voice the belief that law might yet contain the worst excesses of political catastrophe, exemplify and guide the progress of "civilization," and facilitate the realization of the individual subject within a well-ordered society. Readers may note as well the moves across this chapter from fiction to memoir to jurisprudential treatise and parliamentary debate. Despite their apparent generic differences, these texts all serve as important points of entry into the rich legal imaginations of the period. More specifically, these works share the problem of how to narrate law's work in both the anticipation and wake of political catastrophe. They draw on the formal legal knowledge of their authors and rely on techniques of storytelling, scene setting, and creating figurative language as the means of discussing the political and moral import oflaw in a time of revolutionary upheaval. In this respect, the texts considered here all belong to the literature of law and catastrophe. From their diverse perspectives, and across the standard lines of genre or disciplinary object of inquiry, they all engage deeply with liberal concerns about law's capacity to repair the damage that abrupt political rupture and its aftermath inflicted on the legal individual, a figure celebrated by the revolution

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of 1789 and later installed by the Napoleonic civil code as a foundational element of the modern French juridical imagination. As it reads explorations of revolution, law, and the civil individual in nineteenthcentury France, this study underscores some of the historically specific particularities of French liberalism, especially its aversion to the leveling ambitions of republican and socialist democracy as they emerged on the scene of revolutionary upheaval, its unlikely affiliation-given its attachment to liberty and its association with "moderate" phases of revolutionary activism -with conservative visions of "order," and its commitment to French "civilization" as a moral alternative to the radical imaginary of the nation. 34 Despite their national inflections, however, the concerns that preoccupied liberal imaginations in nineteenth-century France have been influential if somewhat obscured elements in the larger domain ofWestern reflection on law and political catastrophes of the individual. In a broader view, then, this chapter explores the genealogy of both the perennially renewed liberal faith in the stabilizing effect of the legally constituted civil subject and the equally persistent anxieties about law's capacity to respond to the catastrophic in meaningful or effective ways. Thinking about the work of law in an age before the generalization of actuarial thinking and its technologies of containment, the chapter considers the long and always uneasy past ofliberal hopes for law in what Samuel Beckett has marked as catastrophe's "long pause" afterward. 35

"Here I Am!": Legal Existence Across the Abyss Few commentators have devoted themselves as systematically to the problem of law and the self in the wake of violent political upheaval as novelist Honore de Balzac. Although Balzac specialists tend to stress the author's conservatism, monarchical loyalties, and antagonism toward the leveling effects of revolutionary change, Balzac's fiction also gives voice to postrevolutionary liberal legal desire in the space of its illiberal critique. 36 Balzac's short novel, Le Colonel Chabert, first published in serial format in 1832, speaks especially powerfully oflaw's belated and uncertain confrontation with the aftermath of political catastrophe as it extended into the era of the Bourbon restoration. 37 A narrative of the seductive but impossible promise of law as remedy for catastrophe's injuries, Chabert explores both the instability of the boundaries that supposedly separate catastrophic moments from their longer term consequences and the repeated disintegration in the long pause afterward of the juridical categories and identities on which the meaningful operation oflaw claims to depend. 38

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The novel relates the story of a French army officer who falls on the field of battle in Prussia during Napoleon's 1807 campaign against Russia, is trampled by his own forces, declared dead, and then thrown, still living, into a mass grave. He manages to extricate himself from "the pit" (p. 1112) and, eventually, from a life of vagrancy, illness, and periodic institutionalization in Germany. Several years after the definitive restoration of the Bourbon monarchy in 1815, Colonel Chabert, Napoleonic count and "the hero ofEylau," returns to France unrecognizable and indigent. 39 Intent on reclaiming his legal identity, rewriting his civil status as living rather than dead, and restoring his rights to his wife and his wealth, Colonel Chabert single-mindedly seeks out the reparative powers of the law. As he puts it to the lawyer, Derville, "It seems perfectly simple to me. They thought I was dead. Here I am! Give me back my wife and my fortune ... " (p. 1132). Chabert's desire to return from legally declared death, his declaration of faith in the law to respond affirmatively to his announcement-"Here I am!"-so that he might be recognized and restored to himself, proves not to be so simple. Instead, Balzac's story insists on the ways public political catastrophe, collapsed into its lasting effects, resonates in the very possibility of coherent individual existence where it extends beyond biological survival. As it unfolds the story of the colonel's attempts to be present in the world of properly documented and juridically intelligible subjects, tlle novel meditates on the unsupportable legal paradox of the living dead in the liberal civic order of the early nineteenth century. At a deeper level, it explores the capacity of French civil law, itself the residue of revolutionary and Napoleonic upheaval, to secure the stability of identities in the aftermath of catastrophe.40 As the critical Balzac will suggest, Chabert's assertion that he is "here," rather than inspiring juridical hospitality and the restoration of self, repeatedly threatens him with expulsion into the worlds of certified criminality or madness. The story begins with Chabert's attempts to meet with his wife's attorney, Derville. In these opening pages, Balzac introduces Chabert as a juridical nonperson who returns to a France now officially devoted to closing "the abyss," a term of multiple meanings in the novel used in these early pages to signify the Revolutionary and Napoleonic eras, conflated into a single catastrophic rupture in the continuity of monarchical rule. 41 During his first visits to the lawyer's chambers in Paris, the colonel is repeatedly described in the terminology of the unfamiliar: He is "the stranger" (p. noo), "un chinois," literally "Chinese," but also used to refer to something that promises to be excessively complicated (p. 1096), and as the clerks take in his cadaverous appearance, the "disinterred" (p. no2)Y When Chabert attempts to identity himself as a living man who is legally dead, he finds he

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is speaking an untenable contradiction, eliciting nonsense syllables and laughter from the law rather than its proper appreciation. "Pluffl Oh! Ah! Bf10un!" the clerks shout. "Trinn, la, la, trinn, trinn" (p. 1103). After he is at last admitted to seeDerville and introduces himself as the Colonel Chabert "who was killed at Eylau," both the lawyer and his head clerk likewise assume that the paradoxical utterance cannot be true. The colonel's unsustainable assertion leads the men oflaw to conclude not that they are confronting the disintegrative consequences of catastrophic collapse but that they are faced with a delusional "madman" (p. mo ). Chabert's dreadful unintelligibility, so comical to the unfeeling junior clerks and so clearly an indication of derangement for Derville, is of very particular sort. French law in the early nineteenth century specifically articulated a category of "civil death" for the living-that is, the metaphorical "death" of one's juridical person and the loss of the civil rights that attach to it. La mort civile was declared, however, only in the case of people facing capital punishment, forced labor in perpetuity, or deportation as a result of criminal proceedings. 43 In another section, the civil code anticipated the reappearance of a person formally declared missing and required the return of his property from those to whom the court had accorded its provisional or even permanent distribution. 44 The returned person or a legal representative, "armed with proof of his existence," would further be empowered by the law to challenge any subsequent union entered into by a spouse during the time of the absence. 45 Neither of these regulated spaces of living death or protected disappearance facilitates Chabert's efforts to reclaim himself. Consigned by his legal demise to the ranks of the civil dead but never condemned, reappeared after a long absence but never formally declared missing, Chabert's presence in Paris is not ghostly but chimerical, a disturbing mix of physical and legal forms that elicits an uncontrolled flow of laughter or revulsion rather than belief. 46 In this way, Chabert occupies his own story as a juridically incoherent monster, disfigured by the confluence of personal and collective catastrophe, an embodiment of unexpectedly and unnaturally mixed categories who in turn brings forth a nonsensical cascade of mixed words and sounds from those who encounter himY Thus, Balzac describes the clerk's reaction to Chabert's assertion of his impossible identity as "a torrent of cries, laughter, and exclamations, that would require all the language's onomatopoeia to depict" (p. 1103). A few pages later, Balzac returns to this theme, writing that Chabert's face was "something so dreadful that no human utterance could express it" (p. 1109).

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The primary root of the colonel's problematic identity is documentary. The question of his existence depends entirely on the textual regime of l'etat civil, or the state certification of a person's civil status, including the facts of birth, marriage, and death. 48 The authority of this documentary order to predicate meaningful existence should not be underestimated. Indeed, in the Napoleonic and post-Napoleonic liberal order, formal inscription in the municipal register constituted the very foundation of the civil subject who only then might exercise legal agency according to his or her gender, age, and family status. 49 His official death, the colonel explains to the lawyer, conformed to all the legal requirements: It was established by a "death certificate, likely prepared according to the rules of military jurisprudence" (p. nn). 50 The documentary determination of Chabert's legal nonexistence recurs in his relations with his wife, now remarried to a rising noble of the old regime and reluctant to give up the advantages of her new life. The letters he wrote her during his exile in Germany, the duplicitous Madame Ferraud tells Chabert in their first meeting after his return, "were opened, soiled, the writing unrecognizable, and I had to believe, after having obtained Napoleon's signature on my new marriage certificate, that some clever imposter wanted to trick me" (p. nss). The project of reckoning with the documentary authority of l'etat civil lies at the crux of Chabert's engagement with the law on the other side of the political abyss. It also structures his private conflict with his wife, who, Balzac notes, treads perilously close to a moral "abyss" (abime) in her desperate efforts to avoid "precipitating" the personal and social "catastrophes" of marital breakdown and the revelation of her past as a courtesan (p. n43). 51 Chabert thus describes his return from supposed physical death as an encounter with the weight of the documents that both maintained and depended on his metaphorical civil death: When I arose, dead, against a death certificate, a marriage certificate, and birth certificates, they [the lawyers he had consulted before seeking out Derville] threw me out, sometimes with that coldly polite manner that you put on to get rid of an unfortunate, sometimes brutally, as with those people who believe they are dealing with an imposter or a madman, depending on their characters. I was buried under the dead, but now I am buried under the living, under documents, under facts, under a whole society that wants me to return to the grave [rentrer sous terre] (pp. 1116-17).

Chabert despairs of the way his literal death can no longer be differentiated from his metaphorical death, a condition Balzac stresses throughout the story by repeatedly describing him as a living cadaver. 52 At the same time, the colonel's

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faith in the law to redress the disintegrating personal effects of political catastrophe persists for much of the novel, despite his documentary interment. He believes, at least during his early consultations with Derville, that his problems will be solved by the delivery oflegal papers from Germany attesting to both his identity and his survival. These in turn would facilitate the correction of his etat civil in France so that he might then bring suit as a legitimate legal agent against his uncooperative wife. As the story unfolds, however, Balzac suggests repeatedly that the documentary truth of the individual, carried by Napoleonic law across international borders as well as across the abyss from the Revolution to the Bourbon restoration, is far more difficult to stabilize than Chabert would believe. "It is a matter," Derville advises the colonel, "of proving [your identity] to people who have an interest in denying your existence. Thus your documents will be challenged" (p. 1132). "Everything," the lawyer reminds him at another point, "can be argued" (p. 1134). Even his wife's "innocent" bigamy, resulting in the birth of the children she never had with Chabert, will not be so simple to undo. "In your case," Derville contends, "the point oflaw is beyond the code ... " (p. 1132). The legal indeterminacy of the colonel's identity lies also in his genealogy. Abancloned at birth, Chabert's claim to his name, even when properly documented, rests on a fiction of parentage. "If I had any blood relatives," he laments, "maybe none of this would have happened, but, I must tell you, I am a foundling, a soldier whose patrimony was his courage, whose family was everyone, whose country was France, whose only protector was the good Lord. No, I'm wrong! I did have a father: the emperor!" (p. 1120 ). Chabert's horror of undocumented existence on the other side of the abyss that is the condition of his death brings back the condition of his infancy: Abandoned and sans etat, he must rely in both cases exclusively on the state and its law to place him in the world oflegitimate civil actors. 53 Without the financial or emotion resources to "live life as a plaintiff" (p. 1135) while the documentary foundation of his identity is argued indefinitely, Chabert realizes as well that "compromise" in the form of an out-of-court settlement-the solution proposed to him by Derville-will not redress the injury of his painful hybrid condition. "Compromise? Am I dead or alive?" (p. 1123). Indeed, the text of the settlement drafted by the lawyer entails a contradictory blend of affirmation and renunciation. The countess Madame Ferraud, the settlement declares, will sign a notarized statement recognizing that Chabert is who he claims to be, ensuring that the registration of Chabert's legal death can be "voided." For his part, the colonel will renounce all marital rights and accept the formal annulment of his

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legal marriage. 54 In exchange for his agreement not to reclaim the property lost in the settlement of his estate at the time of his "death," finally, Madame Ferraud will pay Chabert an allowance of 24,000 francs. By these provisions, Derville's proposal aims to rectify Chabert's status as the living dead, but only by leaving the formal consequences of his civil death almost entirely in place, at least where they affect the organization of his past. Although the law will respond at last to his claim that he is "here" with a revision of his recorded death, the return to juridical life is nearly as empty as his legal death: Neither the return of his wife nor his fortune will follow from it. The terms of the settlement nevertheless prove unacceptable to the countess, who sees the shadow of her own catastrophic social destruction behind any legal proceeding-that is, behind any public recognition of Chabert and, especially, behind the official revision of his recorded death. Rather than face Chabert in court, however, and rather than give up 24,000 francs of income, Madame Ferraud plots to ensure that Chabert's civil death becomes permanent by other means. It is at this point in the story that Balzac brings forward the alternative legal constructions of the colonel that have shadowed the identity he seeks as a rights-bearing, individuated civil agent returned from beyond the abyss: "Chabert" as motivated criminal imposter and "Chabert" as deluded madman. Madame Ferraud works these alternatives simultaneously as she struggles to prevent the inauguration of her own catastrophe by reinforcing the colonel's unbearable civil death. First, through the elaborate staging of sentimental tableaus, she attempts to seduce Chabert into renouncing all he seeks in the settlement and admitting that he is an imposter out of pity for her and her children. At the same time, she colludes with her husband's secretary to have Chabert taken by force to Charenton, a notorious asylum that has haunted Chabert whenever his undocumented declaration that he was the dead war hero was met with laughter. 55 When he discovers each of these plans in turn, Chabert responds with horror, anger, and despair. Unwilling to sign "authentic" papers admitting in "crude terms" that he is an imposter and swindler, outraged by the plan to have him committed, and unable to bear the financial and emotional costs of an "odious" war of litigation with a wife who will not publicly acknowledge him, he finds that he no longer has the strength even to try to "jump the ditch" (p. 1163). 56 The revelation of his wife's manipulation and betrayal strips Chabert of any hope that the law might organize his return. Exhausted, he momentarily considers suicide as the means of ending his bitter suspension between the legal worlds of

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the living and the dead (pp. 1162-64). Instead, the colonel decides to craft his own compromise. Secured by his word rather than by written text, the colonel's settlement rests on the promise to renounce the "illustrious" name of Chabert, although not by admitting he is an imposter or by submitting to the notion that he is deluded in claiming it. Rather, Chabert refuses proper naming as required by the registers of l'etat civil altogether and declares that he will retain only his given name-that is, the foundling name that predates the Revolutionary and Napoleonic eras in which "Chabert" was made: "I am now only a poor devil named Hyacinthe ... " (p. 1164). Even that name loses its meaning in the final scenes of the novel after the colonel accepts his civil nonexistence and is "swallowed up" (s'abimer) by "that mire of rags that swarms through the streets of Paris" (p. 1165). In these two episodes, the first set in criminal court where Chabert awaits sentencing for vagrancy and the second outside a state institution for the elderly decades later, Balzac stresses the ease with which even the self-declared identities of the undocumented collapse under the weight of the enumerative practices that organize the prosecution and incarceration of those without resources. "From the moment a man falls into the hands of justice," he comments on Chabert's vagrancy conviction, "he is nothing more than a responsible party [etre moral], just as, for the statistician he becomes a number" (p. 1167). At Bicetre, a hospital that also housed an old age hospice for the poor, he is identified by the narrator as "one of the two thousand" warehoused there in 1840 (p. 1169). Even Chabert embraces the ways identity beyond l'etat civil gives way to the anonymous individuation of the number. 57 "Not Chabert! Not Chabert!" he shouts at Derville when the lawyer encounters him in the road by Bicetre. "I call myselfHyacinthe ... I am no longer a man. I am number 164, ward seven" (p. 1170 ). Ironically, Chabert's quest for recognition within the framework of civil law ultimately leaves him abandoned within an institutional grid of individuated identification that denies him the status of human being. Unable to employ the law to ameliorate his monstrous juridical hybridity and help him "leap the ditch" of political and personal catastrophe, Chabert must in the end return to his prerevolutionary origins as a helpless dependent of the state. "What a life!" Derville comments. "Born in the foundling hospital, he returns to die in the old age hospice, after having helped Napoleon conquer Egypt and Europe in between" (p. 1171). Yet Balzac emphasizes Chabert's foundling condition, not to make him an exception but rather to make him exemplary. 58 Deprived of an extralegal identity embedded in relations of kin and orphaned in adulthood by the political exile of

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his "father," Napoleon, Chabert demonstrates both the fundamental documentary instability of state-regulated regimes of identity and the problematic way those regimes anchor legal agency in a civil sphere destroyed and rebuilt across the abyss. Colonel Chabert concludes with Balzac's grim assessment of law's capacity to respond in any meaningful way to the desire for a secure civil identity and a just restitution of a legally meaningful self. While the priest might "purify, repair, and reconcile," Derville despairs in the last lines of the novel, the attorney's office is a "sewer that cannot be cleaned out." For Derville, the law can only bear witness to the worst in human beings, especially in their most intimate relations. Catastrophe appears in this conclusion in a doubled aspect: Public and political, the abyss in which "Chabert" came into existence, it is also mirrored for Balzac in the "moral abyss" of private and interior human existence after the Revolution. "I cannot describe to you what I've seen, for I have seen crimes against which justice is impotent," Derville tells Godeschal, a younger lawyer who is traveling with him when he comes across Chabert for the last time (p. 1172). Balzac's concluding emphasis lies on the destructive excesses that surge from humankind's moral abyss and render law powerless to act or describe the unspeakable. As it insists on the rightful place of moral consideration in any reflection on political catastrophe, the novel also speaks directly to the double bar that obstructs the way to the full realization of a postrevolutionary, post-Napoleonic civil self as promised and-supposedly-secured by law. In writing the story of the colonel as a tale of foundational texts of identity that are simultaneously essential and also always open to dispute, Balzac challenges the dream of the abstract subject of civil rights as the survivor of the Revolutionary-Napoleonic era upon whom a new, well-ordered French society might be founded. In this regard, Balzac poses the ethical and juridical problem of the sans-papiers, or the undocumented person, for the rule of law in the modern West. 59 Although Chabert's entry into Restoration France is defined by the temporal-political rather than the geopolitical borders that tend to organize current debates about undocumented refugees and immigrants, he is nonetheless relegated to the status of those who claim France as physical and affective home but who cannot be placed in the textual order that secures meaningful legal existence and indigenous rights. 60 Proper documentation is only one of obstacles blocking the way to the liberal fantasy of the rights-bearing civil individual who might anchor postrevolutionary society. Balzac also demands that the reader reckon with the way poverty creates unsurpassable barriers to the abstract individual agency presumed by civil law.

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Without the means to pay for court fees or legal representation, the poor in Colonel Chabert are blocked from civil action and instead are ushered into the domain of law through the doors of presumed criminality. In this arena of transgression and its punishment, the anonymity of the undocumented person finds its modern bureaucratic response in the numbered registers of incarceration. The next section of this chapter takes up the theme of poverty, especially politicized poverty, as it bore upon the discussion of civil law, the legal self, and revolutionary catastrophe in the mid-nineteenth century.

1848: Catastrophe at the Threshold ofJustice Recalling his uneasy feelings about the "feverous and irregular symptoms" discernible in French political life shortly before the king was toppled by a revolutionary uprising in February 1848, Alexis de Tocqueville confessed that even he, one of the more "attentive observer[s]," was "far from supposing that catastrophe was so close and would prove so terrible ... " 61 Although he had been no admirer of the monarchy as it had evolved in tlle 1830s and 1840s, Tocqueville could not contain his horror in the face of revolutionary chaos that appeared to him to violate his cherished ideal of "a regulated and orderly freedom, controlled by religious beliefs, mores and law." 62 Tocqueville turned repeatedly to the language of"catastrophe" to articulate his shock at the arrival of political events vaguely anticipated by some but "unforeseen by everyone." 63 For Tocqueville, as other French liberals whose commitment to liberty was severely strained by tlleir aversion to revolutionary violence and the democratic radicalism of the republican and socialist left, the February uprising was especially disturbing because of the ways it appeared to open the door to the antihierarchical and redistributive demands of politicized poverty. Here, too, the idiom of catastrophe, with its tropes of collapse, transgressive mixing, and the fundamental disturbance of linguistic order, penetrated Tocqueville's retrospective account of the dread he felt in the immediate aftermath of the February uprising: After the 25th February a thousand strange systems poured from the impetuous imaginations of innovators and spread through the troubled minds of the crowd. Everything except the Throne and Parliament was still standing; and yet it seemed that the shock of the revolution had reduced society itself to dust, and that there was an open competition for the plan of the new edifice to be put in its place; each man had his own scheme ... One was going to abolish inequality of fortunes; another that of education; while a third

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attacked the oldest inequality of all, that between men and women. There were remedies against poverty, and against that disease called work, which has afflicted man since the beginning of his existence. 64 The destructive ideas that spilled and spread across Paris, threatening to lay waste to the familiar social order with their "extraordinary ferment and unheard-of disorder," all "adopted the common name of socialism." 55 Tocqueville's account of revolutionary catastrophe as a leveling event that "reduced society itself to dust," thus producing a common ground in "socialism" for the alarming confluence of "a thousand strange systems," is valuable here not as a definitive history of the complex events of 1848 but for the way it crystallizes liberal anxiety about the ways popular uprising threatened to rewrite the future in unexpected ways. In particular, Recollections captures a widespread perception of calamitous destruction and the unstoppable collapse of once reliable boundaries that would come to inform liberal responses to the revolution and its more radical social claims, especially as those responses took shape in the longer wake of the new government's violent repression of popular insurrection in June. 66 At the core of the liberal reaction to 1848 lay the concern about the revolutionaries' discursive relocation of the problem of inequality from the realm of individual civil standing before the law to the domain of social rights, including the right to work and the right to public assistance for those unableto work. 67 Those ideas, one influential opponent wrote in 1850, were monstrous, mixed from categories that should not be joined. They were "chimerical, ruinous, antisocial [and] sterile." The project of rebuilding in the aftermath, particularly where state aid was concerned, thus entailed the reimposition of proper boundaries, "the separation of the true and the false, the possible and the impossible." 58 Even after popular protest in defense of the right to work had been silenced by the army in June, and even after a new constitution redefined those newly asserted rights as matters of state voluntary "obligation" in late 1848, a move that supplanted the rightsbearing social citizen with the social and moral value of government "charity," liberal thinkers brought their fears of revolutionary catastrophe to a new round of reflections on law, poverty, inequality, and the stability of the civil self. 69 This postrevolutionary liberal concern about political catastrophe, law, and the restoration of the civil self as the primary figure in any legitimate discussion of justice refocused attention on an issue that had been introduced in the French parliament in February 1848, just eleven days before antigovernment protestors took to the streets: whether France should legislate some form of state-provided

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legal aid for the poor. 70 At first glance, the documentary record suggests that liberal commentators and legislators merely picked up in mid-1849 where they had left off in February 1848. 71 Indeed, some of the central discursive work entailed the reanimation of narrative and figurative practices that had organized the increasingly lively discussion oflaw, 1'assistance judiciaire, and the poor individual in the years before the revolution. 72 Beneath the surface of this apparent continuity, however, lay the enduring effects of a double catastrophic disturbance. For no one returning to this ground in 1849 could forget the "unanticipated" events that had so dramatically disrupted the rhythms oflegislative process in February 1848. Nor could they suppress the fact that the theoretical and political ground for imagining legal equality had unexpectedly shifted beneath their feet. This seismic movement inspired both a historical revision and a fearful anticipation of the revolutionary futuresimultaneously predictable and unknown-that would pervade savant reflection and parliamentary debate into the early 1850s. In this context, state-provided legal aid returned to the French liberal imagination as a critical project for repairing and preventing catastrophic social violence. At the same time, however, in its recognition of poverty as a meaningful category of analysis with regard to constitutional equality, legal aid threatened to transform the courtroom from a site where individual agents sought justice as supposed equals to a place where class-based passions might turn the civil suit into the building block of a new revolutionary barricade. 73 Before February 1848, the question of public legal aid for the poor had been a matter of great interest for members of one of France's most influential bodies of liberal thinkers: the Academy of Moral and Political Sciences?4 In 1847, Gustave de Beaumont, who had accompanied Tocqueville to America in the early 1830s, and Alexandre Vivien, a prominent member of the Academy's section on legislation whose work on legal aid would enter directly into parliamentary deliberation, presented their respective reports to their colleagues on how best to provide legal assistance to the French poor?5 Although the reports engaged in spirited discussion of alternative structures of state aid- especially the comparative virtues of the avocat des pauvres, a state-appointed lawyer for the poor as found in parts of Italy, and judicial aid that provided fee relief rather than state-provided representationtheir significance here lies in the academicians' larger vision of poverty, the civil individual, and the possibility of an equalized justice that made those alternatives thinkable solutions on the eve of the unforeseen "February catastrophe." 76 At the heart of that larger vision was the characterization of the poor civil subject as impotent, vulnerable, and unable to overcome the barrier of fees and

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costs that obstructed his access to justice. Invoking France's reputation as an "advanced civilization," de Beaumont noted that justice was ever more "inaccessible" for the poor. "Strange progress," he remarked, "that incessantly perfects the protection of the strong, while making the support requested by the weak more and more impossible." 77 Vivien likewise read poverty before the law as a matter of individuated vulnerability. To render the alarming defenselessness of the impoverished civil person more tangible, and to develop support for his proposal in the stimulation of moral outrage, his report sketched melodramatic scenarios that tied sections of the civil code to the conventions of domestic fiction. 78 "If a wife is beaten by a brutal spouse ... does not an interest in public safety require the declaration oflegal separation? If a child born of adulterous relations imposes himself on the [legitimate] household, does not family order justify legal disavowal? If an ungrateful son refuses food to his needy father, does public morality in no way protest against this callowness?" 79 To give even more poignant contours to his representation of the impoverished civil individual as unprotected from immoral violence-a vision that assimilated the universal male subject of law to the status of vulnerable dependent and the family threatened by "dangerous" illegitimacy to the position of the legal individual-Vivien drew upon the languages of misery and infirmity. The state, he contended, must recognize and respond to "the suffering of the poor individual, who, for lack of money, cannot exercise his rights ... " 80 The poor person "who wants to claim his rights," he added, "is halted by obstacles that deny him the benefits of the common law and strike him with a kind of incapacity." 81 Vivien's emphasis on poverty as a source of both suffering and disabling constraint prepared the ground for his representation of state-provided legal aid as a philanthropic debt to constitutional equals whose active legal agency was compromised by want. 82 "Improve the condition of the lower classes," he concluded, "call upon them to participate in all the benefits of civilization, increase their well-being, suppress the inequalities that can be repaired [corrigees] by laws, that is the aim that we must set for ourselves ... " 83 In the liberal discourse of legal assistance before 1848, the poor civil subject thus emerged as a figure of weakness that could not enter fully into the law, or the civilization of which law was the emblem, without some form of charitable public intervention. He, for the civil individual who was incapacitated by poverty was generally represented here in terms of compromised masculine autonomy, was defined primarily by defenselessness, especially in the face of the lawless behavior of

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others, particularly in the domain of family and household. He was also rendered in terms of his inability to overcome the economic obstacles that barred access to a law celebrated precisely because it could not recognize the distinctions of wealth that in practice excluded him from its purview. In this way, the poor civil subject of pre-1848 liberal imagination occupied a paradoxical position: Equal by definition, at least when the universal subject of law was taken to be the adult male, he was also always unequal, always in need of external supplement that simultaneously acknowledged and denied the difference poverty introduced into civil status. 84 Despite the consistency with which they represented the poor civil subject as the fragile and suffering object of the state's charity, however, de Beaumont and Vivien could not suppress their concerns that the poverty might also enter the courtroom as antagonistic excess. In keeping with Tocqueville's retrojected anticipations of revolutionary upheaval, their 1847 reports on legal assistance also bear traces of concern about "feverous and irregular symptoms" that might turn state aid into the tools of civil war. De Beaumont, for example, interrupted his study of the avocat des pauvres with a warning against the apparently increasing allure of radical solutions to economic inequality. "Rather than seek the remedy for social problems in very frightening and vague theories," he counseled, "many innovators, as impotent as they are well-intentioned, would do better to study what already exists in different nations and look for those salutary things that might be borrowed from them." 85 Vivien issued an even stronger warning about legal aid's potential to facilitate catastrophic social conflict by opening the door to dangerous admixtures of poverty and passion or by inverting social inequalities rather than ameliorating their effects. "The judicial arena," he declared, "must not be turned over to bad faith, to the spirit of vengeance, or to cupidity, which, under cover of indigence, would try to take the father, the landlord, or the honest and irreproachable citizen to court." Overempowering the poor with dangerous forms oflegal assistance-for Vivien, the powers derived from free representation by a state functionary-would be the same as providing the "have-nots" with "hunting rights on the haves." 86 In the long aftermath of 1848 and the violent June repression of popular protest, liberal jurists picked up the interrupted project of developing and presenting legislative proposals that would make legal aid for the poor a formal government obligation. In some respects, the postrevolutionary discussion of legal assistance appeared to return to the narrative strategies and figurative choices that had organized earlier debate as if no "catastrophic" disturbance had intervened.

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For Monsieur Bioche, a specialist in civil and commercial procedure and lawyer at the Paris Court of Appeals, the provision oflegal aid still functioned as an index of national civilization. "In the laws of all civilized peoples, whether ancient or modem, there are special dispositions that facilitate poor people's access to the courts," he argued in the introduction to his 1849 proposal for legislation on l'assistance judiciaire.s 7 In the same vein, Monsieur Delapalme, conseiller at the highest court of appeals, declared that the state provision of aid corresponded to "progress" in "custom and generous opinion ... "ss Constructions of poverty as an obstacle blocking the way to justice and the lexicon of equal access also seemed to reenter liberal discourse uninflected by revolutionary conflict. Antoine de Vatimesnil, reporting to his colleagues in the National Assembly in 1850 on a draft bill dedicated to legal assistance, argued that "justice must be accessible to all ... "s9 For Bioche, "the enormity of court costs" was best represented as an "obstacle" that was one of the "great difficulties for the poor person." 90 Delapalme developed the motif of the "barrier" throughout his discussion of state-provided aid: "there are so many barriers placed at the entrance of the temple of justice, barriers that the poor man cannot always clear." 91 For Delapalme and the other jurists, the poor individual was reinscribed as a figure of weakness whose suffering was best read through the lens of philanthropy. "Oppressed, powerless to shake off the yoke of that oppression, he discovered that he needed a key made of money to make the sanctuary of justice, where he was hoping that he would find some help, open for him." 92 What should be made of such seeming discursive continuity across the revolutionary "abyss" in the consideration of legal assistance for the poor? One possibility is that the upheaval of 1848 did not substantially shake liberal confidence that providing equal access to the law through state-based philanthropy would ameliorate any suffering associated with economic inequality. To be sure, that confidence seems to have been robust enough to lead to the successful enactment of a law in 1851 that allowed the state to waive costs for those poor individuals whose means were deemed insufficient and whose causes were adjudged to be sound by a panel attached to the court. 93 Yet the silence on the turmoil of the revolutionary uprising, and especially on the central place of politicized poverty and the claims to assistance as a right that the citizenship of poverty had authorized in 1848, might also be read as a sign of extreme unease. For as the Bourbon restoration had attempted to efface the revolutionary and Napoleonic eras while simultaneously responding to the desires ofliberallaw that had been legitimated during that radical

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rupture in monarchical time by writing the civil code into its own charter, so too the liberal jurists of the mid-nineteenth century attempted to erase the revolutionary moment while amplifying the importance oflaw that would both speak to and mute poverty's radical pressure on the universal promise of equality. From this perspective, the liberal project of providing legal aid to the poor entailed retrospective revision and forward-looking reconstruction but could not acknowledge the destructive event as a legitimate moment in its history. 94 The desire to close the gap over 1848 is especially evident in the way liberal jurists organized their stories of legislative precedent. De Vatimesnil, for example, told a tale of accreted steps toward the comprehensive provision of legal aid that began with Napoleonic decrees on pro bono representation and ended with an 1846 statute that waived the costs related to acquiring copies of civil status records for poor couples who wished to marry. 95 In 1850, he contended, the draft bill on l'assistance judiciaire did not entail any sort of radical change. Instead, "it was only a matter of regularizing by complete provisions that which already exists, whether in law or in fact." 96 Delapalme traced the antecedents to the law even further back, beginning his narrative of gradual progress in Roman law. A 1610 ruling from Henry IV's council of state, he noted, "contain[ed] the complete development of the principle of public assistance ... " 97 For Bioche, the line between the 1849legislative project and prerevolutionary calls for reform, especially the reports generated by the Academy of Moral and Political Sciences in 1847, was direct and uninterrupted. 98 Yet the excesses that contemporary liberal commentators attributed to the revolutionary moment, and especially to the socialist radicalization of poverty, could not in the end be contained in juridical discourse by figurative consistency and genealogical continuity. The double catastrophic disturbance that brought deliberation on liberal models of legal aid to a halt in February 1848 and shook public assistance loose from the secure conceptual foundation of voluntary philanthropy often spilled through the discursive barriers erected by the jurists in the aftermath of the uprising. In these moments, it saturated into their pronouncements about progress and charity with the fear that the proposed measure, designed to clear the poor individual's pathway to the pursuit of justice as an equal, might in practice open the courtroom door to the violence of a suppressed but unfinished civil war. In Delapalme's report, for example, the survey of precedent lingered on the way revolution had brutally interrupted the development of charitable projects for

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ameliorating the civil inequality of the poor, not in 1848 but in the late eighteenth century. In 1787, he explained, /'Association de bienfaisance judiciaire had been founded by "enlightened citizens" and "men of good will" who devoted themselves to rectifying "the unequal struggle of weakness against strength, or of poverty against wealth [opulence] ... " 99 With the arrival of revolution in 1789, the work of the association was brought to a shockingly abrupt halt. Many of its members, Delapalme claimed, were killed by revolutionary violence, including the association's president, "the protector of the weak and oppressed," sentenced to death by the Jacobin revolutionary tribunal during the final throes of the Terror.100 Delapalme's long detour into the effects of revolutionary violence on men of good will and their efforts to protect the poor legal subject makes audible his abiding concern about the destructive capacity of revolutionary catastrophe. By transposing recent anxieties about the return of a bloodthirsty popular dictatorship onto the historical past, Delapalme reproduced the recent effects of political catastrophe in his own text, interrupting the scholarly sequence of precedent with scenes of violence and implying by unspoken analogy a terrifying alternative fate for midcentury "men of good will" if the radicalism of 1848 had been permitted to escalate any further. 101 In de Vatimesnil's report to the National Assembly, the project of removing the barriers that kept the poor individual from seeking justice as a civil equal also generated scenarios of unsettling conflict, the reversal of social hierarchy rather than the amelioration of its effects, and the unloosing of dangerous sentiment. If the legislator "makes it too difficult to obtain assistance," de Vatimesnil worried, "he runs the risk of stifling legitimate claims ... " On the other hand, if he "opens the door too wide, he will harm both the interests of the treasury and those of the people against whom those who receive aid would bring suit." At both extremes, the provision of legal aid "would degenerate into injustice and the oppression of others; it would exhaust the sources of public revenue; and it would become disastrous [funeste] nourishment for harassment and litigiousness." 102 Should the proposed legislation authorize the creation of a state-salaried avocat des pauvres, he added, it would "accord the poor a formidable advantage over the rich ... " 103 In this account of the calamities that legal aid might usher across the courtroom threshold, the poor and suffering individual who had stood at the center ofliberal endorsements of legal assistance was thus transfigured by the enduring fear of social aggression across the divide of wealth. Excluded from justice by stringent requirements, excessively empowered, or inappropriately stimulated, the suffering

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individual incapacitated by poverty who inspired de Vatimesnil's report disappears into the collective menace of "the poor," a predatory collectivity still possessed, as Tocqueville wrote in his description of the "socialist" residue of the revolution, by "greedy envious desires." 104 Class war was not the only danger imagined by the advocates of legal aid in the aftermath of 1848. De Vatimesnil also wrote revolutionary catastrophe into his anticipations of how the expansion of the state's judicial bureaucracy might create an additional scene of conflict, especially if the legislature adopted the model of the state-appointed avocat des pauvres. The effort to prepare children for careers in this expanding sphere of state service, he argued, would "give birth to the spirit of intrigue devoted to the attainment of the object of one's ambition, and, when that fails, the spirit of armed faction [faction] that would upend society and capture the desired position through disorder and violence." 105 Not only might the wrong form oflegal assistance to the poor individual open the doors of the civil court to a dangerous poverty that had been executed, exiled, and incarcerated at the end of the June insurrection, but it also threatened to initiate ruinous antagonism among the educated and upwardly mobile, a civil war of civil servants. The final version of the draft bill, approved by theN ational Assembly in January 1851, limited legal assistance to fee relief alone. Even without the dreaded magistracy of the poor, some liberal-minded observers believed that state-provided aid would not assure the restructuring of a France so recently rent by revolution into a world of appropriately restrained civil individuals. As one member of the legislature put it, unless defendants were also offered fee relief, legal aid to the poor would become "a means of disturbing one's neighbors' tranquility and attacking their wealth. In effect, this is the danger of the law. When a man receives assistance ... he can attack his neighbor, force him to bear formidable expense, disturb his tranquility and diminish his fortune, without running any risk himself ... " 106 Despite this final representation of legal aid's worrisome potential to reanimate revolutionary catastrophe case by case rather than street by street, the law was passed without further revision. By 1851, then, the liberal juridical imagination had been deeply imprinted by the desire to preserve French civilization and its moral order by disaggregating the poor and returning them to a rule of law that simultaneously constituted, liberated, and contained the legal individual. At the same time, that imagination had also been suffused by the fear that state-based programs to encourage and regulate that return might "open the door too far": The unimpeded legal access of which

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liberal jurists dreamed was shaded by their worry about what or who would enter the courtroom under the state-supplemented sign of poverty. Where Balzac had captured the concern that civil individuals might lose their identities in the aftermath of political catastrophe and be swallowed by the mire of the streets, the jurists of the mid-nineteenth century feared that the indigent civil individual might all too easily bring the radicalized masses of the streets into the courtroom with him. Not coincidentally, much of the parliamentary debate on the final draft of the law, and much of the juristic writing in the decades after it was enacted, focused on anxieties about both the indeterminacy of "poverty" in the operation of the law and the fraudulent declarations of indigence that indeterminacy threatened to invite.107 Years after the suppression of its most radical incarnation in June 1848, poverty seemed ever more dangerous and opaque to liberal observers; as a category in the allocation of civil justice, it offered cover under which malicious sentiment might exploit the state's aid and enlist the law in the war on one's neighbors' wealth and tranquility. It threatened civil justice from within rather than from without. Anxiety about imposture also shaped the finer details of the law's stipulations on the allocation of aid. Only those who had provided copies of official tax records and a certificate issued by the mayor of the town in which the supplicant resided, supporting a sworn declaration of indigence, could claim poverty as their condition. Underscoring Balzac's earlier vision of legal personhood as a fragile textual status, especially for the poor, the 1851law made it even more difficult to conceal the ways liberal legal agency was predicated upon positive regimes of documentation and the gatekeeping operation of state bureaucracy. The disrupted discussion of state-provided legal aid in the mid-nineteenth century thus reveals the ways in which political catastrophe-in rerouting narrative trajectories and reworking the crossing metaphoric lines of obstruction and access, strength, and vulnerability-put enormous pressure on French liberalism's ambivalence about its "cherished principles." In the wake ofl848, the promise of freedom was darkened by the nightmare of open competition among socialism's "thousand strange systems," by ruthlessly competitive career ambitions ignited by the dangerous expansion of government and burning fiercely in the heart of bourgeois families, and by the moral dangers of unrestrained litigiousness. It became more and more difficult to imagine a stable balance point between too much liberty and too little, between too many barriers to justice and too few. Political catastrophe and its aftermath also brought into the open liberal desire for practices of regulation and purification that might protect French civilization from the

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dangerous excesses of popular politics and the unnatural confusion or admixture of categories that seemed to accompany it. Above all, the desire to create and use law to correct the imbalance that poverty introduced in civil equality was shadowed by the anxiety that even the best intentioned legislation might reverse inequalities rather than ameliorate their effects, that liberal law might generate catastrophic upheaval rather than contain it. In Le Colonel Chabertand across the midcentury discussions oflegal aid, events encoded as political catastrophe repeatedly rattle the supposedly natural integrity of the civil individual. For liberal observers, catastrophe's upending and disintegrating effects undermined quotidian forms of ambivalence about law and liberty such that their frictions became increasingly difficult to bear. Together, the two stories of law and political catastrophe in the French nineteenth century suggest that while narratives of "return" to the law generally foregrounded those people destroyed or excluded by revolutionary violence and its aftermath, liberal desire for law also sought some path of return and renewal for itself, both in the realm of abstract ideal and within the narrative frame of the historical particularity of the moment. Between 1815 and 1850, that reconstitution of desire entailed the reassertion oflaw's restorative powers, especially in regrounding the civil person, in recuperating the past, and in repairing and reframing France's claim to forward-looking civilization within new political circumstances. At the same time, the restoration of those hopes for law also brought with it the reconfiguration of anxiety about law's place in the genesis of human-made catastrophe, including catastrophes of moral dimension that breached the imagined lines between the public world of the legal individual and the private domain ofhusbands, wives, and children. Renewed assertions of faith in law's power to regulate freedom were mixed with the whispering of deep discomfort about law's possible implication in the troubling alternative futures-futures populated by dreadful chimerical admixtures of the true and the false, the possible and the impossible-that revolutionary catastrophe and its aftermath had unrelentingly placed before the liberal mind's eye.

Notes 1. "Reunion d' experts aKobe sur les tremblements de terre et la sante," Communique de presse OMS/8, 24 janvier 1997, http://www.who.int/archives/inf-pr-1997/fr/cpf97-08.html. 2. Medecins sans frontieres (MSF), Soins urgents en situations de catastrophe (Paris: Her-

mann, 1979), 198. 3· Ibid., 199.

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4· Ibid., 204. 5· Ibid., 207. 6. Fran